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France's Emmanuel Macron to unveil presidency bid | France's Emmanuel Macron to unveil presidency bid |
(about 2 hours later) | |
France's former Economy Minister Emmanuel Macron looks set to unveil his bid for the presidency. | |
He is not expected to join the race to be the Socialist candidate, but as head of the centrist En Marche movement he created in April. | |
The move has unsettled Republican rivals vying to be selected in new US-style primaries from Sunday. | |
Frontrunner Alain Juppe said Mr Macron had betrayed President Hollande, "whom he's stabbed in the back". | |
The former economy minister is a one-time protege of the president who quit the unpopular Socialist government in August amid discontent within the party over his political ambitions. | |
Mr Hollande has not yet confirmed whether he will stand for re-election and will make a decision in the coming weeks. He has the lowest popularity ratings of any post-war French president. | |
Mr Macron, who has never been elected, was expected to end speculation at a press conference in a Paris suburb. | |
He launched En Marche in April to promote "new ideas... neither of the right nor the left". The movement now has almost 97,000 members and has already received €2.7m ($2.9m; £2.3m) in donations. | |
It is thought any presidential bid will aim to exploit the deep divisions in the French left - with one survey suggesting that 38% of French voters believe Mr Macron would be a good president. | |
But it has also caused upset among some of the centre-right candidates vying for the Republican nomination - which, for the first time, will be chosen ahead of the presidential vote in April and May, in a nationwide vote of supporters in a US-style primary election beginning this Sunday. | |
The favourite to win the poll, running on a centrist ticket, had been former Prime Minister Alain Juppe. | |
But he is facing stiff competition from former President Nicolas Sarkozy, who is running a law-and-order campaign, and Thatcherite former PM Francois Fillon. | |
The winner of the Republican race is seen as most likely to take on National Front (FN) leader Marine le Pen in a second-round presidential runoff. | |
Mr Sarkozy's bid was dealt a blow on Tuesday after new allegations emerged that he received millions of euros in illegal financing from the regime of late Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi. | |
He and his former chief of staff have denied wrongdoing in the case, which involves funding for his successful 2007 presidential campaign. | |
Meanwhile, President Francois Hollande has said France's state of emergency should continue until the election. | Meanwhile, President Francois Hollande has said France's state of emergency should continue until the election. |
It was due to be lifted in January, having been in place since the November 2015 terror attacks in Paris. Mr Hollande's proposal would see it kept until 7 May, the second and final round of the presidential election. | It was due to be lifted in January, having been in place since the November 2015 terror attacks in Paris. Mr Hollande's proposal would see it kept until 7 May, the second and final round of the presidential election. |