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Le Pen retains French poll lead, still seen losing runoff - two surveys

Far-right leader Marine Le Pen remains favourite to win the first round of France's presidential election but would lose the May 7 runoff against either the centre-right's Francois Fillon or centrist Emmanuel Macron, two polls showed on Thursday.

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Far-right leader Marine Le Pen remains favourite to win the first round of France's presidential election but would lose the May 7 runoff against either the centre-right's Francois Fillon or centrist Emmanuel Macron, two polls showed on Thursday.

Both polls were conducted at the start of this week, before Wednesday evening's announcement that veteran centrist Francois Bayrou would ally with Macron rather than stand himself, a move that could boost the centrist candidate at Fillon's expense.

The polls' findings are in line with a slew of other opinion surveys over the last few weeks.

A BVA poll showed Macron beating Le Pen comfortably, by 61 percent to 39 percent, in the runoff vote.

If the scandal-tainted Fillon faced off against Le Pen in the second round instead of Macron, he would receive 55 percent against her 45 percent, a narrower margin of victory and well short of the 20-point lead polls gave Fillon a few weeks ago.

A separate Harris Interactive poll also had Le Pen leading in the April 23 first round, but in the runoff Macron would secure 60 percent against her 40 percent. Fillon would get 57 percent to Le Pen's 43 percent, it showed.

SCANDALS

The campaigns of both Le Pen, leader of the anti-euro, anti-immigrant National Front, and of Fillon, a former prime minister, have been shaken by investigations into allegations that they misused public money. Both have denied any wrongdoing.

Fillon, 62, was once the election frontrunner but is now engulfed in a scandal over salaries paid to his wife and children out of public funds for work they may not have carried out. He says they did do the work for which they were paid.

Le Pen is facing accusations of paying her chief of staff and bodyguard illicitly from European Parliament funds that she is now being pressed by the assembly to repay.

Macron, a 39-year-old ex-banker who has never held elected office, could benefit from his cleaner image as well as from Bayrou's endorsement, which on Wednesday cheered investors nervous about France's economic prospects under Le Pen.

Polls have suggested in the past that Bayrou, 65, has the support of about five percent of French voters, and his backing for Macron could prove crucial in a tight race in pushing the centrist into the runoff.

Macron says he wants to transcend the classic left-right divide in French politics and has drawn huge crowds to rallies that easily equal those of his closest rivals.

Macron and Bayrou were expected to work on the details of their alliance on Thursday.

 

(This article has not been edited by DNA's editorial team and is auto-generated from an agency feed.)

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