TOKYO ā Japan welcomed the reelection of French President Emmanuel Macron as key to the unity of Group of Seven at a time when its members need to work together to end Russiaās invasion of Ukraine as soon as possible.
Prime Minister Fumio Kishida congratulated Macron in his Twitter messages in both Japanese and French, saying, āI hope to closely work with President Macron in a wide range of issues, including Russiaās invasion of Ukraine and cooperation in the Indo-Pacific region.ā
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Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihiko Isozaki on Monday extended āheartfelt congratulationsā to Macron on his reelection.
āAs we face a critical moment to end Russiaās outrageous aggression and defend the peaceful world order, the G-7 unity is required more than ever, and we plan to continue working closely with France led by President Macron,ā Isozaki said.
Japan, worried about the impact of Russian invasion of Ukraine in the East Asia where China is increasingly taking assertive military actions, has tried to play a greater role as part of G-7 and has joined in sanctions against Moscow and provided support for Ukraine in line with other members.
Isozaki called France āan important, special partner for Japanā that shares universal values including freedom, democracy, human rights and the rule of law. He said Tokyo intends to strengthen cooperation in the Indo-Pacific region.
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CANBERRA, Australia ā Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison is welcoming President Emmanuel Macronās reelection to a second term in France as a āgreat expression of liberal democracy.ā
Macron was scathing of Morrison after Australiaās conservative government canceled a 90 billion Australian dollar ($66 billion) submarine contract in September.
Macron accused Morrison of lying to him about the state of the French contract before a deal was announced for the United States and Britain to supply Australia with nuclear-powered submarines. Morrison denied misleading Macron, who refused to take the Australian leaderās phone calls.
On Monday, Morrison tweeted: āCongratulations Emmanuel Macron on your reelection as President. Another great expression of liberal democracy in action in uncertain times.ā
āWe wish you & France every success, in particular your leadership in Europe and as an important partner to Australia in the Indo-Pacific,ā Morrison added.
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KYIV, Ukraine ā Ukraineās leader has congratulated Emmanuel Macron on winning a second term as president of France ā and beating a far-right rival seen as close to Russia.
Ukrainian President Volodymy Zelenskyy called Macron āa true friend of Ukraineāon Sunday and expressed appreciation for his support.
Tweeting in French, Zelenskyy said: āIām convinced that we will advance together toward new joint victories. Toward a strong and united Europe!ā
Macron has sought a diplomatic solution to Russiaās war in Ukraine. France has also sent significant weapons to Ukraine and Macron is planning more.
In a TV debate ahead of Sundayās runoff, Macron assailed challenger Marine Le Penās past ties to Russia, notably a loan her party got from a Russian-Czech bank in 2014.
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PARIS ā Watching Franceās presidential election results was especially stressful for Yasmina Aksas.
The 19-year-old law student could have been forced to remove her headscarf if far-right leader Marine Le Pen had won instead of incumbent Emmanuel Macron.
Speaking to AP as the first projections came in showing Macron in the lead, Aksas was visible relieved ā but far from overjoyed.
āItās still 40% of people voting for Le Pen. Itās reassuring that itās Macron but itās not a victory,ā said Aksas, who is active in feminist and social justice organizations. āIt reflects nothing of what I think and what I identify with.ā
She expressed concern about extremist language and ideas that āused to be limited to militant far-right groupsā but have now entered the mainstream.
Under Macronās presidency, she described encroaching limits on Muslims in the name of fighting extremism. āThey made it a problem for everyone while remaining vague about who the menace is.ā
āSo if you feel concerned about what theyāre doing, like closing mosques, associations, when they say theyāre targeting jihadists, you shouldnāt feel targeted, otherwise you are suspected of not being part of the republic.ā
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MORE STORIES:
ā Macron vs Le Pen: France votes in tense presidential runoff
ā Franceās presidential rivals: Key moments, private lives
ā EXPLAINER: How Franceās old-school voting system works
ā Follow all AP stories on France's 2022 presidential election at https://apnews.com/hub/france-election-2022
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OTHER DEVELOPMENTS:
LONDON ā A European economist says that if exit polls hold true and Emmanuel Macron wins the election against his right-wing challenger Marine Le Pen, France will most likely remain an engine of growth and progress in Europe for the next five years.
Economist Holger Schmieding says France has outperformed Germany for the past five years. He says France under Macron would likely remain on track for a sustained period of faster gains in employment and per-capita GDP. He says a dynamic France next to a still somewhat strong Germany is a major positive for Europe.
The economist says Macron has strengthened the French economy by more than any of his predecessors since Charles de Gaulle.
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BERLIN ā German Chancellor Olaf Scholz was the first foreign leader to call President Emmanuel Macron and congratulate him on his reelection, Scholzā office said.
āThe Federal Chancellor and the President confirmed their intention to continue the close and trusting relationship between Germany and France, not least in view of the current challenges such as the Russian war of aggression in Ukraine,ā Scholz office said in a statement.
It also said the result āsignified a clear commitment to Europe and the European unification process,ā adding that Scholz and Macron agreed to meet as soon as possible.
The Czech prime minister also sent his congratulations to Macron.
āFrance is our vital partner, we are keen on developing our great relationship further,ā Petr Fiala tweeted.
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PARIS ā Rights groups have breathed a sigh of relief at Marine Le Penās failure to become French president, but warned against complacency and urged the victor, Emmanuel Macron, to fight racial profiling and discrimination against Muslims, and better protect migrants.
CĆ©cile Coudriou, head of Amnesty International France, cited āegregious human rights failingsā under Macronās presidency including āFranceās treatment of refugees and asylum at its borders, systemic discrimination in the form of ethnic profiling by police, disproportionate and dangerously vague counter-terror laws, curbs to the right to protest, intrusive surveillance that impacts the right to privacy, failing to uphold climate commitments and selling arms to Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.ā
Antiracism group SOS Racisme said : āThis victory, which might look large in a cursory analysis, is not so much a victory as a relief. The reality is that Marine Le Pen ... has progressed by about eight points in five years.ā
It criticized Macronās law against so-called āseparatismā by radical Muslims and government ministersā criticism of āwokeismā or āIslamo-leftism.ā It blamed Macronās āarrogance, (economic) liberalism, brutalization of the social movement and nods to the far rightā for worsening tensions in France. āIt is definitely not neutral to help trivialize the far right by āchoosingā it as its opposition and winking at it,ā it said.
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PARIS ā President Emmanuel Macron said a simple āThank you!ā after winning reelection, and praised the majority who gave him five more years at the helm of France.
Macron also thanked people who voted for him not because they embrace his ideas but because they wanted to reject far-right rival Marine Le Pen.
āIām not the candidate of one camp anymore, but the president of all of us,ā he said.
Macron comfortably won reelection to a second term Sunday, according to polling agenciesā projections.
He arrived on the plaza where his supporters gathered, beneath the Eiffel Tower, to the sound of the āOde to Joy,ā the European Unionās anthem, hand in hand with his wife, Brigitte.
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PARIS ā Supporters of far-right candidate Marine Le Pen gathered at her election-night even in Parisā Bois de Boulogne booed loudly as provisional results were announced.
But they quickly looked ahead to June legislative elections ā as did Le Pen in her concession speech.
Francois Denormand, a retired dentist planning to run for a seat as a lawmaker for Le Penās National Rally party in Juneās legislative elections said that what he called āthe third roundā starts tomorrow.
āWe must continue to fight,ā he said. āWe can lose the battle but not the war.ā
Nineteen-year-old Paul Renkert, waving a French flag, admitted that āIām sad.ā
Renkert, who had traveled from the eastern Alsace region, said he had invested time in Le Penās campaign ābecause I believe in the future of France.ā
He is looking ahead to the legislative elections and five years in the future when a new president is elected. Le Pen has not made known her intentions, but āI donāt think sheāll abandon us,ā he said.
Guests from abroad were among those invited to the soiree. Among them was Tom Lamont, with Belgiumās far-right Vlaams Belang party, an ally of Le Penās National Rally. He, too, sent out a message of hope. āItās a disappointment she lost but we see the right-wing movements is growing in France ā¦ and maybe in five years we will have a right-wing presidentā here,ā he said.
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MADRID ā Spanish Prime Minister Pedro SĆ”nchez says that with the victory of Emmanuel Macron as projected by polling agencies, āDemocracy wins, Europe wins.ā
āCitizens have chosen a France committed to a free, strong and fair EU,ā SĆ”nchez, who is also leader of Spainās Socialist Party, wrote, referring to the 27-nation European Union.
SĆ”nchez, Portugalās AntĆ³nio Costa and Germanyās Olaf Scholz had published a joint open letter ahead of Sundayās election presenting the vote as a choice between Macron, a defender of democracy in a strong European Union, and Marine Le Pen, āan extreme-right candidate who openly sides with those who attack our freedom and democracy, values based on the French ideas of Enlightenment.ā
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PARIS ā French far-right figure Eric Zemmour, who failed to reach the runoff in the presidential election, has called for a nationalist coalition to be created in France's parliament.
Zemmour spoke after polling agencies projected that far-right leader Marine Le Pen, head of the National Rally party, had lost the presidential election to centrist incumbent Emmanuel Macron.
Zemmour, who created his own party, āReconquest,ā in recent months, said āthe national bloc must get united.ā
He suggested such a coalition ahead of Juneās parliamentary elections, with the aim to fight both Macronās party and the left.
Zemmour received 7% of the votes in the first round of the presidential election on April 10.
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European leaders have been quick to congratulate French President Emmanuel Macron on his re-election.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who has often sparred with Macron over Brexit and other issues, swiftly congratulated the re-elected president.
Calling France āone of our closest and most important allies,ā Johnson said he looked forward to ācontinuing to work together on the issues which matter most to our two countries and to the world.ā
Italian Premier Mario Draghi said that Macronās victory āis splendid news for all of Europe.ā
He said āFrance and Italy are working side by side, along with the other European partners, to construct a stronger, more cohesive, more just European Union, capable of being a protagonist in the greatest challenges of our times, starting with the war in Ukraine.ā
Portugalās Prime Minister AntĆ³nio Costa says that, by voting for Emmanuel Macron, āFrench people have demonstrated once again their commitment to the European project.ā
Costa, a socialist who was re-elected earlier this year in a landslide victory, wrote Sunday in a tweet that he was enthusiastic about working together with the centrist politician during the next four years.
The Portuguese prime minister made a case for voting to elect Macron in an open letter also signed by his Spanish and German counterparts, Pedro SƔnchez and Olaf Scholz.
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PARIS ā Leftist leader Jean-Luc Melenchon said Sunday that Marine Le Penās defeat in the French election is āvery good news for the unity of our people,ā and vowed to lead the fight against Emmanuel Macronās party in the upcoming parliamentary elections.
Melenchon, who failed to reach the second round by a few hundred thousand votes and had urged his supporters not to vote for Le Pen, said Macronās āpresidential monarchy survives by default and under the constraint of a biased choice.ā
In his address, Melenchon exhorted Macronās opponents to vote in Juneās parliamentary elections to āchoose a different pathā and elect a majority of leftist lawmakers. Melenchon said he would be prepared to lead an opposition government.
āCourage, action, determination, always refusing fatality and resignation,ā Melenchon said.
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BRUSSELS ā Several European leaders and politicians have swiftly congratulated French President Emmanuel Macron for his reelection, as his far-right rival Marine Le Pen conceded defeat in Sundayās presidential election.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen tweeted in French, ātogether we will make France and Europe advance.ā
The Dutch prime minister also tweeted in French his hope to ācontinue our extensive and constructive cooperation in EU and NATO.ā
In Germany, politicians around the political spectrum offered support, including from the pro-business Free Democrats, the environmentalist Greens and conservative Christian Social Union.
Many in Europe had worried Le Pen would undermine European unity and its post-war order.
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PARIS ā French far-right leader Marine Le Pen has conceded defeat in the presidential runoff, handing victory to incumbent Emmanuel Macron.
She said her unprecedented score in a presidential election represents āa shining victory in itself.ā
āThe ideas we represent are reaching summits,ā she said.
French polling agencies are projecting that centrist Macron has won the runoff against Le Pen that took place Sunday.
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PARIS ā French polling agencies are projecting that centrist incumbent Emmanuel Macron will win Franceās presidential runoff Sunday, beating far right rival Marine Le Pen in a tight race that was clouded by the Ukraine war and saw a surge in support for extremist ideas.
If the projections are borne out by official results, Macron would be the first French president in a generation to win a second term, since Jacques Chirac in 2002. But he would face a divided nation and a battle to keep his parliamentary majority in legislative elections in June.
Five years ago, Macron won a sweeping victory over Le Pen to become the youngest French president. The margin is expected to be way smaller this time: Polling agencies Opinionway, Harris and Ifop-Fiducial projected that Macron would win between 57% and 58.5% of the vote, with Le Pen getting between 41.5% and 43%.
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PARIS ā Voter turnout is lower than usual in Franceās presidential runoff Sunday, apparently reflecting voter frustration with both candidates, centrist President Emmanuel Macron and far-right challenger Marine Le Pen.
Turnout at 5 p.m. Paris time (1500 GMT) stood at 63%, the Interior Ministry said. That was below the 65% at the same time in the last presidential runoff in 2017, when Macron overwhelmingly beat Le Pen, and the 72% in when Socialist Francois Hollande won the presidency in 2012.
Polls before Sundayās election gave Macron a solid lead over Le Pen, but to keep it he needs the support of many left-wing voters who shunned both him and Le Pen in the first-round election on April 10. Many of those voters may choose to stay home this time instead.
Polling agency projections and early official results are expected after final voting stations close in France at 8 p.m. (1800 GMT).
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LE TOUQUET, France ā The two candidates for Franceās presidential runoff have cast their ballots ā and basked in adoring crowds outside their polling stations.
Far-right leader Marine Le Pen went first, cheerily greeting election workers in the northern town of Henin-Beaumont, in Franceās struggling former industrial heartland. She emerged from the ballot booth beaming to drop it in a transparent box. Outside, she took selfies with supporters.
Then came incumbent Emmanuel Macron, who shook dozens of hands ā and was handed a small child to hold up ā on his journey from his family home in the resort town of Le Touquet on the English Channel to his voting station.
Inside, he greeted yet more people, posed for photographs with his wife Brigitte, and cast his ballot with a wink for the cameras. The voting booths were shielded by curtains in the red-white-and-blue of the French flag.
About 48.8 million voters are eligible to take part in the runoff, which is being watched around Europe. Early results are expected Sunday night.
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PARIS ā France began voting in a presidential runoff election Sunday with repercussions for Europeās future.
Centrist incumbent Emmanuel Macron is the front-runner, but he's fighting a tough challenge from far-right rival Marine Le Pen.
The centrist Macron is asking voters to trust him for a second five-year term despite a presidency troubled by protests, the pandemic and the war in Ukraine. A Macron victory in this vote would make him the first French president in 20 years to win a second term.
The result of voting in France, a nuclear-armed nation with one of the worldās biggest economies, could also impact the conflict in Ukraine, as France has played a key role in diplomatic efforts and support for sanctions against Russia.