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In Their Own Words: Marine Le Pen and Emmanuel Macron | In Their Own Words: Marine Le Pen and Emmanuel Macron |
(about 5 hours later) | |
It wasn’t supposed to happen. A year ago, few predicted that the French presidential race would boil down to a matchup between Marine Le Pen, a far-right candidate from a party with a racist, anti-Semitic legacy, and an upstart former banker who had never held political office, Emmanuel Macron. But here we are. | It wasn’t supposed to happen. A year ago, few predicted that the French presidential race would boil down to a matchup between Marine Le Pen, a far-right candidate from a party with a racist, anti-Semitic legacy, and an upstart former banker who had never held political office, Emmanuel Macron. But here we are. |
Voters now face two starkly different choices at the polls on Sunday. | Voters now face two starkly different choices at the polls on Sunday. |
What will become of France if Ms. Le Pen, the anti-immigrant, anti-European Union candidate, defies the polls and vaults into the Élysée Palace? Conversely, what would be in store for a country run by Mr. Macron, her centrist rival? | What will become of France if Ms. Le Pen, the anti-immigrant, anti-European Union candidate, defies the polls and vaults into the Élysée Palace? Conversely, what would be in store for a country run by Mr. Macron, her centrist rival? |
Here, in their own words — taken from speeches, interviews and campaign platforms — is a window into France’s possible future. | Here, in their own words — taken from speeches, interviews and campaign platforms — is a window into France’s possible future. |
MS. LE PEN, in an interview with the German magazine Der Spiegel in 2014 | |
MR. MACRON, from his website, translated from French | |
MS. LE PEN, at a rally in April in Marseille. She has pledged to make France “more French” | |
MR. MACRON, on his website | |
MS. LE PEN, in a debate among the five major candidates in March | |
MR. MACRON, in an interview this year | |
MS. LE PEN, at the rally in Marseille in April, in The Times of London | |
MR. MACRON, in a speech in February, according to the website FrenchElection.online | |
MS. LE PEN, after the deadly Bataclan terrorist attacks in Paris in 2015, in The Guardian | |
MR. MACRON, after a gunman tied to the Islamic State killed a police officer on the Champs-Élysées in April | |
MS. LE PEN, after the Champs-Élysées attack, according to CNN | |
MR. MACRON, who wants to force internet companies to release encrypted messages between people suspected of terrorism, according to the BBC | |
MS. LE PEN, in Nice in April, according to The Washington Post | |
MS. LE PEN, on “60 Minutes” | |
MR. MACRON, on his website | |
MS. LE PEN, on “60 Minutes” | |
MR. MACRON, on his website | |
MS. LE PEN, on “60 Minutes.” | |
MR. MACRON, on his website | |
— MS. LE PEN, to supporters at a rally in April, according to The Times of London | |
MR. MACRON, from his platform’s website | |
MS. LE PEN, to Europe 1 radio in 2014, according to The New Statesman | |
MR. MACRON, in London in February, in The Sydney Morning Herald | |
MS. LE PEN, who wants to restore the franc, at a rally in April, according to Reuters | |
MR. MACRON, in The Daily Telegraph in April | |