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Sarkozy party facing poll defeat | |
(about 6 hours later) | |
Nicolas Sarkozy's centre-right UMP party appears to be heading for defeat in French regional elections. | |
Initial results suggest the opposition Socialist party has taken a strong lead in the first round of voting. | |
The outcome will be a major blow for Mr Sarkozy in the last nationwide poll before presidential and parliamentary elections due in 2012. | |
The far-right National Front looks to have done better than expected, with up to 12% of the vote. | The far-right National Front looks to have done better than expected, with up to 12% of the vote. |
Sunday's election took place with President Sarkozy's popularity rating at an all-time low and unemployment at 10%. | |
'Not over' | |
The French leader had sought to play down the importance of the vote, insisting it was only about regional issues. | |
But many voters used it to signal their disapproval of the president and his government, says the BBC's Emma Jane Kirby, in Paris. | |
The French people have sent a clear and strong message Martine AubrySocialist leader Profile: Nicolas Sarkozy | |
As well as the fallout from the economic crisis, a range of unpopular planned reforms appear to have cost the governing party. | |
Turnout for the ballot was also poor. The abstention rate was put at some 52%, a record for a regional election. | |
President Sarkozy did not comment on Sunday night, but Prime Minister Francois Fillon insisted the vote was not over. | |
Near complete results suggested the Socialists were likely to emerge as the largest single party, and that the centre-left and Greens would get more than half the vote. | |
The leader of the Socialists, Martine Aubry, said the result was a blow to President Sarkozy's government. | |
"By this vote the French people have sent a clear and strong message of refusal to a France that is divided, anguished and weakened," she said. | |
Le Pen triumphant | |
The Socialist party is deeply divided at national level, but remains strong in the regions. | |
FRANCE'S ELECTORAL CALENDAR May-June 2007: Presidential and parliamentary elections see Sarkozy elected president and UMP victoryMarch 2010: Regional elections provide key half-term testMay-June 2012: Next presidential and parliamentary elections Sarkozy's party faces drubbing | FRANCE'S ELECTORAL CALENDAR May-June 2007: Presidential and parliamentary elections see Sarkozy elected president and UMP victoryMarch 2010: Regional elections provide key half-term testMay-June 2012: Next presidential and parliamentary elections Sarkozy's party faces drubbing |
It already controls 20 out of 22 regional councils in the country and now looks likely to make further gains in the final vote next Sunday. | |
National Front leader Jean-Marie Le Pen appeared on national television after the vote, holding a poster banned by a court that read: "No to Islamism." | |
The 81-year-old politician called on voters to back the party again in round two, saying his party was "combative and capable of rebuilding this country, which is in a horrible state." | |
His party effectively tied for third-place nationally with Europe Ecologie. | |
The National Front's surprising performance comes against the background of social and racial tensions after the government's public debate on national identity. | |
Some 44 million voters were registered to elect 1,880 councillors from party lists to control regional budgets on transport, education and economic development. |