AFP via Getty ImagesCentrist
Gabriel Attal threw his hat into the presidential ring on FridayIn the peculiar French system of voting, everyone knows that having too many players in the multi-candidate first round of the
presidential election next April amounts to political suicide.With several candidates vying for the same slice of the electorate, the vote is divided up and all fall below the qualification mark for round two – in which only the two leaders from round one take part.This was already true in the old politics, where Socialists and Gaullists used to battle it out. How much more true is it now, when historic formations of right and left are being eclipsed by
populist forces on their flanks?AFP via Getty ImagesBruno Retailleau is challenging for the presidency for the conservative RepublicansSo, with a year to go,
Edouard Philippe is cautiously moving his campaign into gear – mindful that being an early favourite in the presidential race is as often a hindrance as an asset.In a meeting in Reims east of
Paris earlier this month, he announced his three campaign directors as well as a distinctly
Gaullist election slogan –
France Libre (Free
France).Leaning clearly to the right on economic matters, he favours a further pushing back of the age of retirement from its current 64, and a law to enshrine balanced budgets. Both issues could be the subjects of early referendums if he is elected next year.There is also the small matter of a
corruption probe just announced into Philippe in his function as mayor of the northern port city of
Le Havre. His team says the accusations of favouritism are untrue and will be fought at every turn, but they cannot be helping.AFP via Getty ImagesMacron has served two terms, winning the presidential elections of 2017 and 2022Most significantly, though, any cold-headed analysis of Philippe's prospects must acknowledge that political momentum in
France ahead of next year's elections remains strongest not in his centre ground, but at the extremes – especially on the right.Anti-elite sentiment, economic insecurity, social tensions and declining public services have prepared the ground for candidates of radical change.For them, Philippe is an easy target because he is so obviously a figure from the old power system. Prime minister from 2017 to 2020, he is forever branded for his enemies as a Macronite.On 7 July – two days after Philippe's
Paris rally – the big event in
France's pre-campaign will take place, when sentence is delivered by an appeal court on the RN's EU money trial and
France will learn whether Marine Le Pen is struck with ineligibility and thus unable to run next year.All the polls suggest that whether she can or cannot makes little difference, because the media-savvy Jordan Bardella scores, if anything, even better than she does.But will that be borne out when the hard campaigning gets under way? AFP via Getty ImagesJordan Bardella, 30, will stand for the presidency for Le Pen's party if she is barred from runningPhilippe is reported to be hoping for a Bardella candidacy, because he reckons the 30-year-old's inexperience will soon begin to tell, whereas Le Pen, 57, is a tough election warrior with a deep rapport with voters across the country.The RN is a nationalist party which wants to limit immigration, for example by stopping families from joining migrant workers and ending the right to nationality for all born on French soil. Officially at least, the party wants to bring down the age of retirement to 62.As for the hard-left
France Unbowed (LFI), its leader Jean-Luc Mélenchon declared himself a candidate earlier this month, with a promise among his first acts as president to dismantle the media empires of French billionaires like Vincent Bolloré.Calling for hefty new taxes on big business and an opt-out from EU rules, the 70-year-old former minister has built a formidable support base in the "new
France" of the high-immigration banlieues - the suburbs of French cities - and among the prospect-deprived, university-educated young.As a candidate in 2022, he came within an ace of qualifying for the second round against
Emmanuel Macron, and believes his destiny is to face off against the far right. "When the rest are gone, it'll be me and her," he has said.But in that "battle of the extremes" -
populist left versus
populist right - for the presidency of the French republic, all polls suggest that there would be one clear winner: and it is not Jean-Luc Mélenchon.