'French Thatcher' Fillon wins France's Republican primary
François Fillon will lead France's
Republican party after winning a runoff Sunday in the party's first-ever
US-style primary election. Former prime minister François
Fillon appears poised to become the next leader of France's Republican party as
millions of voters go to the polls Sunday.
Sometimes called
the "French Thatcher" for his apparent admiration of
Britain's former leader, Fillon is a social conservative who has talked of
ending France's famed 35-hour work week and getting tough with the country's powerful
trade unions. He has also spoken of cutting public spending, abolishing the
wealth tax, reducing immigration and investing billions in security, defense
and justice.
He is running
against the mayor of Bordeaux, Alain Juppé,
who is also a former premier but a more moderate conservative. Juppé also has
vowed to scrap the 35-hour work week and push economic reform and stricter
border control.
The vote is a
runoff in the party's first-ever US-style primary election. The first round put
Fillon well ahead, with 44.1% of the vote. Juppé received 28.6% and former
President Nicolas Sarkozy came in third with 20.6%, eliminating him from the
final round.
The winner will
likely face Marine Le Pen of the far-right National Front Party in a
presidential vote next spring.
Le Pen's
anti-Europe and anti-immigration stance has been gaining popularity among
French voters, and in an
interview with CNN last week, she said she'd been emboldened by
Donald Trump's surprise victory in the United States.
It "makes
the French realize that what the people want, they can get, if they mobilize
themselves," she said.
Voters are
widely expected to boot out the Socialist Party that has ruled France since
2012 under the leadership of President Francois Hollande, whose popularity is
waning.
Fillon, 62, is
a lawyer who served as prime minister between 2007 and 2012 under Sarkozy. He
has been compared to Britain's "Iron Lady," the late Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher, for his hardline social policies.
French
newspaper Liberation morphed Fillon's face with Thatcher's in a cover image
this week -- no doubt inspired by the Republican's tough talk on unions and pledge to cut 500,000 jobs from the civil service.
Just a month
ago Fillon was considered an unlikely bet for the presidency, but he won over
voters with a polished performance in televised debates.
He apparently
also has struck a popular tone in the country's fight against Islamic terrorism
and ISIS after publishing a new book, "Beating Islamic
Totalitarianism."
As a Catholic
from Le Mans, a city in northwest France, Fillon symbolizes the traditional
provincial right.
The father of
five lives with Welsh-born wife Penelope in a 12th-century castle near where he grew up. Fillon
also is a race car enthusiast who once
appeared on France's "Top Gear" TV program.

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