PARIS: French voters headed to the polls on Sunday
for the first round of a presidential election that is expected to mark the end
of Nicolas Sarkozy's turbulent term in office.
Predictions
of a high abstention rate and strong protest vote left the outcome uncertain,
but recent opinion polls pointed to the right-wing incumbent coming second to
his Socialist challenger Francois Hollande.
The two
57-year-old political veterans are thus on course to face each other
head-to-head in a May 6 run-off, which will decide who runs what is commonly
regarded as the world's fifth greatest power for the next five years.
Polling
began Saturday in France's far-flung overseas territories, and got underway on
the European mainland at 8.00am (0600 GMT) on Sunday. It was to continue until
6.00pm in most of the country, and 8.00pm in major cities.
French
polling agencies are permitted to take samples directly from ballot boxes, so
accurate voting estimates are made public immediately polls close.
More
than 44 million voters are registered but pollsters predict around 25 percent
will abstain, a high level by the standards of a French presidential poll and a
source of worry to the candidates, especially Hollande.
Early
turnout figures for the Atlantic island of St Pierre showed voting down six
percent compared to the 2007 race. Voting was also down by about one percent in
Martinique, but it was up two percent in French Guyana.
France
is proud of its republican democratic tradition, and the press marked polling
day with appeals for a high turnout. "To the voting booths!" declared
the newspapers Ouest de France and Voix du Nord.
"At
last, we can vote!" declared L'Alsace.
In all,
ten candidates are in the race, Hollande and Sarkozy being trailed by far-right
flag-bearer Marine Le Pen, hard-left firebrand Jean-Luc Melenchon, veteran
centrist Francois Bayrou and a handful of outsiders.
The
campaign has run on for months but has yet to inspire much passion, except for
a series of mass open-air rallies by supporters of Melenchon, whose
Communist-backed Left Front coalition has made a strong breakthrough.
An
average of the last eight polls released ahead of the end of first round
campaign at midnight on Friday showed Hollande winning the first round with an
average of 28 percent support, against 26.4 percent for Sarkozy.
Far-right
candidate Marine Le Pen was third with an average of 15.75 percent, followed by
Communist-backed Jean-Luc Melenchon of the Left Front with 13.75 percent and
centrist Francois Bayrou with 10.1 percent.
Opinion
polls and campaigning were banned from midnight on Friday, and will restart on
Monday in the build-up to the May 6 run-off, which Hollande is expected to win
by around 55 percent to 45.
Once
the first round is out of the way, Sarkozy and Hollande will face each other in
a two week scramble for the line, including a head-to-head televised debate
that could be the incumbent's last chance to change his fortunes.
The
final fortnight is expected to see some bitter exchanges.
Hollande
says Sarkozy has trapped France in a downward spiral of austerity and job
losses, while Sarkozy say his rival is inexperienced and weak-willed and would
spark panic on financial markets with reckless spending pledges.
Privately,
Sarkozy's top supporters have begun to admit that if Sarkozy fails to regain
the momentum and slip ahead of Hollande on Sunday, he will have too much ground
left to make up before the May 6 showdown.
-
AFP/cc
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