ID :
433974
Mon, 01/30/2017 - 13:01
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France: Hamon wins Socialists’ presidential primary

PARIS Former education minister Benoit Hamon became on Sunday the left-wing candidate for the April 23 presidential election after beating the former Prime Minister Manuel Valls at the Socialists' primary run-off. Partial results of 60 percent of polling stations showed Hamon leading with 58.6 percent of the vote, compared to 41.3 percent for Valls, according to organizers. Organizers said the turnout in the second round was higher than the 1.7 million of the first round last weekend. The primary was open to all who are registered on the electoral roll and for a €1 ($1.04) fee. Hamon told his supporters that his first task is uniting the divided Socialist Party, adding that he will then turn his attention to uniting with the other independent left-wing presidential candidates. “Let’s make France’s heart beat,” he finished his victory speech by referring to his campaign slogan. “I have always had a sense for teamwork and responsibility. Hamon is the candidate of our political camp,” Valls said in his concession speech, wishing Hamon “good luck”. The former PM called for unity to block the rise of far-right leader Marine Le Pen and the right candidate Francois Fillon. In the first round, the center-leaning Valls came in second with 31 percent, tailing the more liberal Hamon who secured more than 36 percent of the vote, giving the current Yvelines lawmaker the lead on the run-off. In their last tete-a-tete debate, Valls, 54, told his supporters the run-off would be "a clear choice between unachievable promises and a credible left”. Hamon, 49, presented himself as the hope to save the limping Socialist Party after a five-year term under President Francois Hollande was marked by terror attacks, a struggling economy and mass protests. Opinion polls, however, show the divided Socialists failing to get past the first of the two-round presidential election set for April 23 and May 7. Indicators point to independent candidate and former economy minister under President Hollande, Emmanuel Macron, conservative candidate and former Prime Minister Francois Fillon, and far-right leader Marine Le Pen as competing for the first two spots of the first round. A Fillon-Le Pen presidential run-off had been considered the most likely scenario until reports came out last Wednesday accusing Fillon of misusing public funds. The 'Penelope-gate' scandal Fillon’s popularity is falling sharply since satirical and investigative weekly Le Canard Enchaine claimed -- citing pay slips -- that Fillon‘s wife Penelope Fillon, who is British, was paid a total amount of €500,000 ($538,000) from 1998 to 2002 and then in 2012, as Fillon occupied the public offices of President of the Regional Council of Pays de la Loire and Prime Minister of France, respectively. Fillon had secured a landslide victory in right-wing primary over Alain Juppe. Although it was legal for Fillon to hire family members, the weekly said the aide job was a fictional position and Penelope Fillon had never actually worked. Finance prosecutors have launched a preliminary probe for misuse of public funds. Fillon, 62, dismissed the reports and said his wife’s "work was real", citing examples of the work he said his wife did as his aide during the late 1990s and 2000s. He told French broadcaster TF1 on Thursday that he had also employed two of his children, who were lawyers, from public funds while he was a senator. Fillon said he will drop out of the presidential race if he is charged and criminally investigated. "Only one thing would prevent me from being a candidate: it's if my honor was harmed, if I were given preliminary charges," the former prime minister told TF1. But French daily Le Parisien claimed that his two children were still law students at the time. Another bout of controversy broke out Saturday as French investigative website Mediapart claimed the Les Republicains and Paris lawmaker benefited personally from embezzled public funds while he was senator. The conservative candidate risks stumbling with his reputation as “Monsieur Propre” [Mr. Clean] and family-man at stake.

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