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Published: GMT, 9 April Updated: GMT, 10 April France's presidential election race has narrowed even further as a shock poll found that most young people are planning to back far-Right candidate Marine Le Pen over Emmanuel Macron. A new YouGov survey this week shows that more than half 56 per cent of voters aged 18 to 24 would back Le Pen, whose National Rally party has vowed to clampdown on immigration, reassert France's national identity and fine Muslims who wear headscarves in public.
Other polls project Le Pen taking 47 per cent of the vote to Macron's 53 among the general population β a much closer gap than when the President beat her in the election five years ago. Just last month, Macron appeared all but certain to become the first French leader to win re-election since Jacques Chirac in But the polls have narrowed sharply in the past two weeks β a development which he has tried to blame on the war in Ukraine.
Le Pen's campaign has been mired by allegations of racism spread by Macron, and this week hit out at the President's 'extremely outrageous' and 'very aggressive' claims. Experts claim a victory for Le Pen would be a victory for the forces of nativism and Right-wing populism in France, and send a political shockwave across Europe and the global financial markets.
A new YouGov survey generated this week shows that 56 per cent of voters aged 18 to 24 would back Marine Le Pen Pictured: Le Pen during a campaign rally this week. The latest prediction suggests that Mr Macron will win 27 per cent of the vote in the first-round election tomorrow Pictured: Macron speaking on French TV station TF1 during his campaign this week. Le Pen has centered her bid on purchasing power, softening her image and tapping into promising to cut taxes and hike some social benefits, worrying financial markets as she gains momentum in the polls.
Pictured: Le Pen on campaign trail this week. Marine Le Pen denied claims by Emmanuel Macron that she is racist β as her chances of becoming the first female President of France continued to grow. The far-Right National Rally party candidate was angered by accusations by Macron, 44, that her bid to take over from him as head of state was grounded in hatred and bigotry of ethnic and religious minorities.