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Le Pen: No free school for foreigners Marine Le Pen: No free school for foreigners
(35 minutes later)
French far-right leader Marine Le Pen calls for an end to free education for foreign children French far-right leader Marine Le Pen has called for an end to free education for foreign children.
This breaking news story is being updated and more details will be published shortly. Please refresh the page for the fullest version. In a speech in Paris, the National Front's candidate in the 2017 presidential race next spring said she had nothing against foreigners.
If you want to receive Breaking News alerts via email, or on a smartphone or tablet via the BBC News App then details on how to do so are available on this help page. You can also follow @BBCBreaking on Twitter to get the latest alerts. "But I tell them: if you come to our country don't expect to be taken care of, to be looked after, that your children will be educated without charge," she said.
"No more playtime," she added.
Ms Le Pen is widely expected to be one of two candidates to reach the second and final round of the election in May.
Who will be France's president in 2017?
Latest opinion polls suggest she is running neck-and-neck in polling for the first round with the centre-right candidate Francois Fillon, who was selected in national primaries at the end of November.
However, around two-thirds of voters would choose Mr Fillon over Ms Le Pen in the deciding round.
Since Marine Le Pen took over the running of the FN from her father almost six years ago, she has worked hard to detoxify the party's extremist image and attract mainstream voters.
Her presidential campaign bears no trace of the party name and features a blue rose, borrowing imagery from both left and right.
The party has continued to focus on reducing immigration and deporting illegal immigrants, as well as leaving the EU.
However, Ms Le Pen has had to respond to Mr Fillon's election as candidate by setting out distinctive policies.
On Wednesday, she accused him of being in hock to France's business organisation Medef, the European Commission, the banks and German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble.