France election: Macron heckled by pro-Le Pen workers

Marine Le Pen (L) poses for photographs with an unidentified supporter (R) and Whirlpool employees outside the Whirlpool plant in Amiens, northern France, 26 April 2017

French presidential hopeful Emmanuel Macron has been heckled by factory workers in Amiens after a visit by his far-right rival, Marine Le Pen.
Ms Le Pen upstaged her centrist rival earlier by turning up to speak to the workers as he met their union representatives a few miles away.
Mr Macron, who is far ahead in opinion polls, is in Amiens, his home town, amid accusations of complacency.
He got another boost when former President Nicolas Sarkozy endorsed him.
François Fillon, the candidate of Mr Sarkozy's own, centre-right Republican party, was knocked out in the first round, leaving uncertainty over how party supporters would vote in the second.
Opinion polls taken since the first round on Sunday suggest Mr Macron, candidate of the En Marche (On The Move) movement, will easily beat Ms Le Pen, who has temporarily stood down as leader of the National Front.

Car park selfies

The Whirlpool household appliance factory in Amiens, in the rustbelt of France's industrial north, faces the threat of closure with outsourcing to Poland.
Image copyright Reuters
Image caption Mr Macron (left) was whistled and booed by workers as he arrived
Mr Macron earlier saw union delegates at the local chamber of commerce, with TV pictures showing them in discussion in a grey meeting room. Meanwhile, Ms Le Pen was having selfies taken outside the actual factory a few miles away.
"When I heard that Emmanuel Macron was coming here and did not plan to meet the workers, did not plan to come to the picket line but would shelter himself who knows where in the chamber of commerce... I considered it was such a sign of contempt for the Whirlpool workers that I decided to... come here and see you," she was quoted as saying by Reuters news agency.
Mr Macron hit back on Twitter (in French), saying, "MLP [Marine Le Pen] = 10 minutes with her followers in a car park in front of the cameras; me = one hour and 15 minutes of work with the unions and no media. Each will choose on 7 May."
When he visited the actual factory, surrounded by journalists, he was booed and whistled.
"There is no work!" a woman shouted repeatedly as he sought to address the workers.

Sarkozy steps in

Ms Le Pen, whose new campaign slogan is "Choose France", seeks to portray her pro-EU opponent as the candidate of "runaway globalisation", hoping to pick up votes from the extreme left despite her own far-right background.
Leading members of the ruling Socialist Party have criticised Mr Macron, a former Socialist minister, for not fighting hard enough in the run-off campaign.
"He was smug," Socialist Party boss Jean-Christophe Cambadelis told French radio. "He wrongly thought that it was a done deal. It's not a done deal."
In a statement (in French) on Facebook, Mr Sarkozy said he would vote for Mr Macron and was retiring from politics himself.
"I consider that the election of Marine Le Pen and the launch of her project will bring serious consequences to our country and to the French," he wrote.
"I will therefore be voting in the second round of the presidential election for Emmanuel Macron. It's a choice of responsibility, which is not in any case a support for his project."

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