In plagiarised speech, Le Pen promises to pull France out of EU

Three separate spokesmen for her used the word “wink” to describe the extracts copied word for word from an address by former Republicans candidate Francois Fillon.

May 02, 2017 04:19 pm | Updated 05:21 pm IST - PARIS:

French far-right presidential candidate Marine Le Pen attends her meeting, on Monday, in Villepinte, outside Paris. With just six days until a French presidential vote that could define Europe's future, far-right leader Marine Le Pen and centrist Emmanuel Macron are holding high-stakes rallies Monday.

French far-right presidential candidate Marine Le Pen attends her meeting, on Monday, in Villepinte, outside Paris. With just six days until a French presidential vote that could define Europe's future, far-right leader Marine Le Pen and centrist Emmanuel Macron are holding high-stakes rallies Monday.

Marine Le Pen deliberately plagiarised verbatim parts of an address of a former presidential candidate as a “wink” to him and the voters she hopes to peel away in a runoff, her spokesmen said on Tuesday.

Francois Fillon, former Republicans candidate, delivered a speech on France’s role in Europe and the world on April 15 just two weeks before Ms. Le Pen’s discourse on Monday.

The subject is at the heart of Ms. Le Pen’s campaign. She promises to pull France out of the European Union and return to the franc currency, and has denounced globalisation’s effects on the French economy and culture.

Three separate spokesmen for Ms. Le Pen used the word “wink” to describe the extracts copied word for word from Mr. Fillon. At no point in the speech did she cite Mr. Fillon or acknowledge the source of the extracts.

“I think with part of the right, we have exactly the same vision on the national identity and independence,” Louis Aliot, Front National vice president, told LCI television on Tuesday.

Immediately after being eliminated in the first round vote, Mr. Fillon called for his supporters to back her centrist rival, Emmanuel Macron.

Both Mr. Macron and Ms. Le Pen are going after the voters of the 9 other candidates knocked out in that vote, in which France’s two main parties both failed to make it to the second round for the first time in the country’s modern history.

Mr. Macron is promising an ethics bill that will block office-holders from conflicts of interest, nepotism and other ethical issues that have infuriated voters.

Mr. Macron, who started his own political movement just a year ago, also promised he could get a legislative majority to pass the measure and others he says France needs to pull itself from the economic doldrums.

Legislative elections are in June, and whoever is president will depend on lawmakers to implement an agenda. Mr. Macron, who has pulled support from the right and the left, said on Tuesday candidates will have to quit their parties to run in his movement.

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