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French PM Manuel Valls announces 2017 presidential bid | French PM Manuel Valls announces 2017 presidential bid |
(about 2 hours later) | |
French Prime Minister Manuel Valls announced on Monday that he is running to become the Socialist candidate in the 2017 presidential election in France. | French Prime Minister Manuel Valls announced on Monday that he is running to become the Socialist candidate in the 2017 presidential election in France. |
"I am a candidate for the presidency of the republic," Valls said at his headquarters in the Parisian suburb of Evry. | "I am a candidate for the presidency of the republic," Valls said at his headquarters in the Parisian suburb of Evry. |
"I want to give everything for France," he stressed, adding that he “cannot be Prime Minister while being a candidate," he said. The 54-year-old Spanish-born prime minister announced that his government will resign on Tuesday. | "I want to give everything for France," he stressed, adding that he “cannot be Prime Minister while being a candidate," he said. The 54-year-old Spanish-born prime minister announced that his government will resign on Tuesday. |
Valls wrote on Twitter that his candidacy “is also a revolt against the idea that the left is disqualified from this presidential election.” | Valls wrote on Twitter that his candidacy “is also a revolt against the idea that the left is disqualified from this presidential election.” |
During his speech, Valls adopted an assertive tone, stating that he is running for president because he wants “an independent France … inflexible in its values [when] faced with the China of Xi Jinping, the Russia of Vladimir Putin, [and] the America of Donald Trump.” | During his speech, Valls adopted an assertive tone, stating that he is running for president because he wants “an independent France … inflexible in its values [when] faced with the China of Xi Jinping, the Russia of Vladimir Putin, [and] the America of Donald Trump.” |
The PM said that he believes himself to be the politician with the right experience for the present international scene. | The PM said that he believes himself to be the politician with the right experience for the present international scene. |
Speculations about Valls joining the race began last week after President Francois Hollande said that he will not be running for a second term. | Speculations about Valls joining the race began last week after President Francois Hollande said that he will not be running for a second term. |
The French Socialist Party is to hold a two-round primary in January to choose its presidential candidate. | The French Socialist Party is to hold a two-round primary in January to choose its presidential candidate. |
The first round of the French presidential vote is scheduled for April 23 next year with a run-off on May 7. | The first round of the French presidential vote is scheduled for April 23 next year with a run-off on May 7. |
It is going to be hard race for the left after Hollande became the most unpopular French president in history, with an approval of just 4 percent in November. | It is going to be hard race for the left after Hollande became the most unpopular French president in history, with an approval of just 4 percent in November. |
The president’s rating crumbled due to austerity, an influx of refugees, and deadly terror attacks on French soil, which authorities were unable to prevent. | The president’s rating crumbled due to austerity, an influx of refugees, and deadly terror attacks on French soil, which authorities were unable to prevent. |
Polls currently suggest that Valls will likely win the Socialist primary, but would trail behind Marine Le Pen from the far-right National Front and Francois Fillon from the right-wing Republican party. | Polls currently suggest that Valls will likely win the Socialist primary, but would trail behind Marine Le Pen from the far-right National Front and Francois Fillon from the right-wing Republican party. |
According to the latest surveys, Le Pen is likely to triumph in the first round of the election, but would, eventually, lose in the run-off to Fillon, who was considered an underdog before convincingly beating favorite Alain Juppe in the primaries. | According to the latest surveys, Le Pen is likely to triumph in the first round of the election, but would, eventually, lose in the run-off to Fillon, who was considered an underdog before convincingly beating favorite Alain Juppe in the primaries. |
READ MORE: France election: Fillon set to beat Le Pen as poll shows 66% support | READ MORE: France election: Fillon set to beat Le Pen as poll shows 66% support |
Sixty-two-year-old Fillon pledges to slash public spending, raise the retirement age, extend the working week, reduce taxes and normalize relations with Russia. | Sixty-two-year-old Fillon pledges to slash public spending, raise the retirement age, extend the working week, reduce taxes and normalize relations with Russia. |
It’s hard to rank Valls’s chances to become the leftist presidential candidate “as there are so many competitors fighting him,” Laurent Jacobelli from the Debout La France Party told RT. | |
“The question is why are there so many Socialists thinking that they could be agood president of the French Republic? The key is that President Hollande has been such a pathetic president that everybody in the Socialist Party think he can do better,” he said. | |
Jacobelli stressed that Valls’s chances of, eventually, claiming presidency in France may be seriously hampered by him being part of Hollande’s team. | |
“Manuel Valls is Francois Hollande's lookalike. He did the same policy hand by hand with Francois Hollande. He was his prime minister. And we had enough – five years – of Francois Hollande. The French citizens will never elect Hollande's lookalike,” he explained. |