Macron, Le Pen set to face off in final round

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Nail-biting first stage of French presidential vote as Emmanuel Macron and Marine Le Pen advance to second round.


Polls have closed in the first round of the presidential vote, and for the first time in modern French history, no major-party candidate will advance to the runoff.
First projections based on partial results showed Emmanuel  Macron, a former minister, and leader of the centrist En Marche! party and Marine  Le Pen, president of the far-right National Front through to the second and final round, which will be held on May 7.
Voter turnout was higher than expected in the closely watched race that could ultimately change the future of Europe.
In a contest that was too close to call up to the last minute, Macron - hailed for months as the favorite to become France's next president - was projected to get 24 percent by the pollster Harris and 23.7 percent by Elsie.
Le Pen, the leader of the anti-immigration and anti-EU National Front, was given 22 percent by both institutes. Three further pollsters all projected broadly similar results.
There was a total of 11 candidates vying for France's top job, four of whom stood a real chance at making it through to the final round.
Francois Fillon, a former minister, and leader of the conservative Republican party and Jean-Luc Melenchon, leader of the far-left La France Insoumise party received around 20 percent each, according to Harris, which means their elimination from the race.

High turnout

Some 47 million people are eligible to vote in France.
By late afternoon, turnout was above 69 percent - almost as high as the 2012 presidential vote. Many had expected a lower turnout this year.
The final abstention rate was also similar to levels seen in the previous presidential election at around 20 percent, according to surveys by Harris Interactive and CNews.

Al Jazeera's Shafik Mandhai, reporting from the official Macron celebration at the Paris Exhibition Centre, said: Among the crowds here, there was a sense of optimism but also slight nervousness that Fillon could pull off a surge at Macron's expense.
A few minutes before the official projections were announced, there were loud cheers as news filtered out about the impending result.
Elmore, a 20-year-old student, told Al Jazeera: I'm happy that Macron won and that he's going to refresh the French political system.
Supporters of Le Pen, meanwhile, chanted We will win! at her headquarters in Henin-Beaumont.
They burst into a rendition of the French national anthem and waved French flags and blue flags with "Marine President" inscribed on them.
Thomas Brisson, a Paris-based political analyst, told Al Jazeera: Le Pen has gained new voters in socio-political terms," including xenophobes and victims of globalization.
But results night was not as good as Le Pen expected. A few weeks ago, she expected to get something like 26 percent.
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http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2017/04/polls-close-cliffhanger-election-170423150220303.html 

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