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French contenders set for run-off | French contenders set for run-off |
(about 1 hour later) | |
The top two candidates in the first round of the French presidential election are beginning intense campaigning for the run-off on 6 May. | |
Centre-right candidate Nicolas Sarkozy and Socialist Segolene Royal defeated 10 others in Sunday's ballot, with a record voter turnout of nearly 85%. | Centre-right candidate Nicolas Sarkozy and Socialist Segolene Royal defeated 10 others in Sunday's ballot, with a record voter turnout of nearly 85%. |
Mr Sarkozy garnered 31% of the vote, while Ms Royal, bidding to be France's first female leader, took nearly 26%. | Mr Sarkozy garnered 31% of the vote, while Ms Royal, bidding to be France's first female leader, took nearly 26%. |
Opinion polls after the result showed Mr Sarkozy would win the run-off. | |
On Monday, Mr Sarkozy is due to address a rally in the eastern city of Dijon and Ms Royal is due in Valence, in southern France. | |
Middle ground | Middle ground |
Voters are now faced with a clear left-right choice. | Voters are now faced with a clear left-right choice. |
FIRST ROUND RESULTS Nicolas Sarkozy - 31.1%Segolene Royal - 25.8%Francois Bayrou - 18.6%Jean-Marie Le Pen - 10.5% First round stirs passions In depth: France decides | |
That political divide may be a return to French tradition, but both candidates are something new for France, says the BBC's Caroline Wyatt in Paris. | That political divide may be a return to French tradition, but both candidates are something new for France, says the BBC's Caroline Wyatt in Paris. |
Mr Sarkozy, the son of a Hungarian immigrant, has a free market stance that sometimes seems closer to that of Britain or the US and an aggressive image that is also a departure from the patrician style of past presidents. | Mr Sarkozy, the son of a Hungarian immigrant, has a free market stance that sometimes seems closer to that of Britain or the US and an aggressive image that is also a departure from the patrician style of past presidents. |
He is hated by the left as a reformer who many fear would change the French way of life by making the nation work harder and longer and by cutting back on its generous welfare state. | He is hated by the left as a reformer who many fear would change the French way of life by making the nation work harder and longer and by cutting back on its generous welfare state. |
Ms Royal is a woman who fought her way to the candidacy against the will of her senior Socialist colleagues, our correspondent says. | |
Her campaign has been dogged by wrangles over policy and a series of gaffes.French voters' viewsIn pictures | |
She is a regional leader whose presidential pledges include a higher minimum wage along with a new form of youth job contract, to ensure that the young in France have a chance of entering the tough job market that all but the best-qualified feel excluded from. | She is a regional leader whose presidential pledges include a higher minimum wage along with a new form of youth job contract, to ensure that the young in France have a chance of entering the tough job market that all but the best-qualified feel excluded from. |
But the run-off could be won by an appeal to the middle ground - and the 18% of voters who supported the centrist Francois Bayrou on Sunday, our correspondent says. | |
Addressing a cheering crowd at his election headquarters, Mr Sarkozy said France had chosen to have a real debate between two different types of politics and asked people to rally behind him. | |
Ms Royal said she represented those who wanted to "reform France without brutalising it". | |
NEXT STAGE OF ELECTION 27 April: Campaigning restarts2 May: Televised debate6 May: Second round poll10 May: Final official results class="" href="/1/hi/world/europe/6378341.stm">Q&A: French election | |
She is said to have already received pledges of support from the other six left-wing candidates who won a total of about 10%. | |
But the far-right National Front, whose leader Jean-Marie Le Pen failed to reach the second round as he did in 2002, said their voters "were not for sale" - an apparent warning shot to Mr Sarkozy. | |
Opinion polls taken after Sunday's results gave Mr Sarkozy between 52 and 54% of the vote - against 46 and 48% for Ms Royal. | |
And only 14% were uncertain of who they wanted to cast their ballot for. | |