It emerged that Le Pen had copied parts of a fiery speech she made yesterday from one made about two weeks earlier by one-time conservative candidate Francois Fillon, the former frontrunner who was eliminated in the first round of the election.
In an address on April 15, Fillon made specific mention of the geography of France's borders, paid tribute to the French language and spoke of a third "French way" for the 21st century.
Florian Philippot, the vice president of Le Pen's National Front (FN) party, said it was "not plagiarism", but "a nod to a short passage in a speech about France".
Le Pen's spokesman David Rachline said the copied passages in the speech were "appreciated by Fillon's voters".
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Just days ahead of Sunday's run-off, 39-year-old Macron remains the frontrunner in the race with polls predicting a 19-point lead, putting him on track to become France's youngest president.
Amid concerns in his camp that a high abstention rate could help Le Pen's chances, company bosses, celebrities and scientific researchers called in newspaper editorials for people to vote for Macron, a former investment banker who styles himself as "neither of the left nor the right".
Opinion polls say abstention could be as high as 30 per cent, higher than in recent presidential elections, as the "Neither-nor" camp gains strength.
Cedric Villani, a high-profile mathematician and commentator wrote in the left-wing Liberation newspaper today that abstaining "is the equivalent of giving half of one's vote to Marine Le Pen in the most important election that France has had for several decades".
Daniel Cohn-Bendit, a veteran rebel of French politics, called on supporters of hard-left firebrand Jean-Luc Melenchon, who scored 19.6 per cent in the first round, to put aside their "hate" of Macron.
Le Pen and Macron will face off tomorrow in a what promises to be a fiery TV debate when the far-right candidate is likely to sharpen her attacks on a candidate she says embodies "the world of finance, of arrogance, of money as king".
Macron fought off accusations from Le Pen that he was controlled by banks.
"I am not under the thumb of the banks. If I were, I would have continued to work for them," he told BFMTV news channel today.
In a feisty speech on Sunday, Macron told thousands of his supporters he would defend "free democracy" if voters choose him.
He said he was aware that "many people will vote for me to avoid having the National Front".
"I say to them that I am completely aware that on May 7, I will be doing more than defending a political programme - I will be leading the fight for the republic and for a free democracy," he said.
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