Speaking at an annual horse fair outside Paris, where she donned a cowboy hat and mounted a horse, Le Pen said Socialist President Francois Hollande's decision not to seek a second term won't change her campaign strategy. Hollande made the announcement late yesterday.
Le Pen, who heads the National Front, told The Associated Press at a party event later today that Donald Trump's victory in the US presidential election shows that "the system" she has long denounced for keeping power in the hands of political elites is vulnerable.
"What is sure is that people are now conscious that they can liberate themselves from the diktats of the system and vote as they like," she said.
Le Pen predicted that Prime Minister Manuel Valls will run as the Socialist presidential candidate, facing her and conservative former Prime Minister Francois Fillon, who won the conservative's primary, among others.
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"You know, I don't believe in this left-right fracture. On the one side are nationalists, patriots. On the other, globalizationists, Europeanists and so, by definition, immigrationists," she told reporters, making up her own descriptions.
"We must defend (Hollande's) actions, and I'll do it, as I'm doing it tirelessly in my duties since 2012," Valls said in a speech today in the eastern city of Nancy.
Valls was Hollande's interior minister from 2012 to 2014, when he became the French prime minister. He said today that Hollande has always put France's "general interest" and "unity" at the top of his priorities and praised "a choice that was not easy" and a man whose dignity "deserves respect."
Other presidential contenders have already announced their intentions to run in the primary, including former economy minister Arnaud Montebourg.
In his televised address yesterday night, Hollande avoided saying if he would support Valls -- or any other candidate.
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