The far-right National Front, the front-runner in the first round of the regional vote, was crushed in yesterday's second round. Despite the defeat, the leader of the anti-immigrant party still has her sights set on the French presidency.
Marine Le Pen hopes to capitalise on fears over Islamic extremism and a surge of migrants into Europe, and on the political horse trading that went on between conservatives and Socialists in the run-up to the regional elections.
This has left the Socialists totally absent from the councils in those two regions. They have also lost the Paris region, which conservative candidate Valerie Pecresse won.
The official results of the regional elections put the conservative party ahead with 40.2 per cent of the votes nationwide. The results from yesterday's vote put the Socialist party in second with 28.9 per cent and the far-right National Front in third with 27.1 per cent.
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The National Front won its largest number of votes in an election with a total of 6.8 million, better than Le Pen's performance in the 2012 presidential race. The party has extended its influence with more than 350 councilors on regional councils.
"Of course, Marine Le Pen can win a presidential election," National Front vice president Florian Philippot said Monday on RTL radio. "We are making progress." Philippot was defeated yesterday in the eastern Alsace region.
Among them is former Prime Minister Francois Fillon, who pledged on Monday to give the French "a real political alternative (...) based on a precise, serious, credible program that would be an agenda of rupture, of radical change."
Both the conservatives and the Socialists expect Le Pen to be present in the presidential election's second round and believe a duel against her could be their best chance to win.