Frech vote kicks off

Pascal Rossignol / REUTERS

Brother Aimable Filipo, 98, a Trappist monk from the Mont des Cats Abbey, exits a voting booth with his ballot in hand during the first round of the 2012 French presidential elections Sunday in Godewaersvelde, northern France.

France began voting on Sunday in round one of a presidential ballot, with a feeble economy that could make Nicolas Sarkozy the country’s first president to lose a fight for re-election in more than 30 years.

In a contest driven as much by a dislike of Sarkozy’s showy style and his failure to bring down unemployment as by policy differences, Sarkozy and his Socialist rival Francois Hollande are pegged to beat eight other candidates to go through to a May 6 runoff, where polls give Hollande a double-digit lead.


Hollande, 57, promises less drastic spending cuts than Sarkozy and wants higher taxes on the wealthy to fund state-aided job creation, in particular a 75 percent upper tax rate on income above 1 million euros ($1.32 million).

He would become France’s first left-wing president since Francois Mitterrand, who beat incumbent Valery Giscard-d’Estaing in 1981.

Sarkozy, also 57, says he is a safer pair of hands for future economic turmoil but many of the workers and young voters drawn to his 2007 pledge of more pay for more work are deserting him as jobless claims have hit their highest level in 12 years.

About 44.5 million people can vote in France, a country of 65 million.

Many French people also express a distaste for a president who has come to be seen as flashy following his highly publicized marriage to supermodel Carla Bruni early in his term, occasional rude outbursts in public and his chumminess with rich executives.

Pascal Rossignol / Reuters

A cyclist rides past electoral panels with campaign posters of the candidates for the 2012 French presidential election in Mons en Pevele near Lille.

“We have to get rid of Sarkozy,” said Marc Boitel, a trombone player taking part in a street protest ahead of Sunday’s vote. “People just want jobs.”

Boitel plans to vote for tub-thumbing radical leftist Jean-Luc Melenchon, who wants an anti-capitalist revolution, and then Hollande in round two, reflecting a voter shift that is unsettling some financial analysts as feeble growth threatens deficit targets in Europe’s No. 2 economy.

Still, Sarkozy is a more formidable campaigner than Hollande, who lacks sparkle.

The president’s verve at the podium combined with his handling of a shooting drama in southwest France in March saw him claw back some ground in opinion polls last month. But he has since slipped back, leaving Hollande 10 or more points ahead in surveys for the deciding runoff.

Hollande is a whisker ahead for the first round, with an average 28 percent support in polls to Sarkozy’s 27 percent. Both are far ahead of far-right leader Marine Le Pen, in third place at 16 percent, who wants to curb immigration and take France out of the euro zone.

Melenchon, whose crowd-pulling charisma and clench-fisted vow to end the power of markets over national economies have made him a star of the election race, ranks fourth with 14 percent, while centrist Francois Bayrou is fifth at 10 percent.

Polls opened at 8 a.m. and will close at 6 p.m. First results are expected two hours later.

NBC News Special Correspondent Ted Koppel makes a faux pas while introducing himself to French president Nicolas Sarkozy. Watch Ted Koppel’s full report on the French elections and how they compare to politics in America on Wednesday, April 18 at 9/8c on NBC’s Rock Center with Brian Williams.

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