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France local elections: Conservatives hold off National Front | France local elections: Conservatives hold off National Front |
(about 3 hours later) | |
France's centre-right UMP party and its allies have taken first place in the first round of local elections, according to official results from the Interior Ministry. | |
They took 32% of the vote, while the far-right National Front (FN) came second with 25%. | |
President Francois Hollande's governing Socialists came third with 22%. | |
The results mean the second round on 29 March will see a run-off between the UMP and the FN in many constituencies. | |
Voters are electing representatives in 101 departments, or counties, charged with issues like schools and welfare. | Voters are electing representatives in 101 departments, or counties, charged with issues like schools and welfare. |
UMP leader Nicolas Sarkozy said the outcome of the first round demonstrated "the French people's profound desire for change". | |
"The conditions for a massive swing back to the right and the centre are in place," he added. | "The conditions for a massive swing back to the right and the centre are in place," he added. |
Mr Sarkozy also ruled out any "local or national" deals with the FN in constituencies where one of the two parties is involved in run-offs with the Socialists. | |
In the past, voters for rival parties have rallied against the far-right group in the second round of voting. | |
Analysis: Hugh Schofield, BBC News, Paris | Analysis: Hugh Schofield, BBC News, Paris |
It's another big vote for the French far right, following the municipal and European elections last year. In this first round of departmental or county council elections, nationwide 24.5% of voters chose the National Front, according to one poll. | It's another big vote for the French far right, following the municipal and European elections last year. In this first round of departmental or county council elections, nationwide 24.5% of voters chose the National Front, according to one poll. |
It is a figure that shows yet again how Marine Le Pen's strategy of building a system of local organisation and shutting down the party's overtly racist elements is paying off. | It is a figure that shows yet again how Marine Le Pen's strategy of building a system of local organisation and shutting down the party's overtly racist elements is paying off. |
However, opinion polls had suggested the far-right could have done better - even emerging as the most popular party in the election. | However, opinion polls had suggested the far-right could have done better - even emerging as the most popular party in the election. |
That didn't happen, which has given some cheer to the mainstream opposition here, led by former President Nicolas Sarkozy. | That didn't happen, which has given some cheer to the mainstream opposition here, led by former President Nicolas Sarkozy. |
The poor results for the Socialists follows on from their defeats in municipal and EU elections last year. | |
However, Prime Minister Manuel Valls said the party had "resisted better than expected". | |
Some polls had indicated that Marine Le Pen's FN could come top in the first round. | |
She had been hoping the elections would build momentum ahead of her expected bid for the presidency in 2017. | |
However, Ms Le Pen, insisted the result was a "very big success" for her party, exceeding its performance in the European Parliament elections. | |
In the Var department, in the south-east corner of France, the FN got more than 30% in all constituencies, according to LCI TV. | |
And in Nord department, near the Belgian border in the north-east, the FN will fight the second round in 37 constituencies out of 41. | |
For the first time in these elections, voters are not choosing single candidates - but pairs of candidates - one man and one woman - in order to enforce strict gender equality in local politics. |