The latest polls: France 2022 presidential election Le Pen will be a strong challenge to Macron

France will hold a presidential election in mid-April 2022. The latest poll by Ipsos shows that Marine Le Pen, the leader of the National Alliance, may defeat French President Macron by 1.5% in the first round of the election; while the poll by Harris Interactive website shows that Le Pen will also have an advantage in the runoff.

According to the British Express, in the poll by Yi Thorpe, Le Pen is expected to get 26.5% is support in the first round of the election, Macron 25%, and the next three candidates get 15%, 10% and 10% support respectively.

In a recent poll by Harris Interactive, Le Pen is also expected to achieve record-breaking support in the general election runoff. The poll shows that if the French final election is held on the polling day, Macron will be re-elected with a narrow margin of 52%, but Le Pen’s support will be as high as 48%.

The report said Le Pen has been condemning Macron’s government for not closing France’s borders quickly during the outbreak of the Chinese Communist virus, causing a serious Epidemic in France.

Macron’s support in his “Republic! The support of Macron’s “Republic! In February last year, Macron’s “République! Forward” party’s Bruno Bonnell said last February that the French and the “Republic! Forward” party, many people “hate” Macron and even warned that “Republicans! Forward” party will lose the election in 2022 and will lose the advantage it currently enjoys in both houses of the French Parliament.

He said, “The biggest risk is that we will still have Macron as president in 2022, but then the National Assembly and the Senate will be reorganized.”

And Frédérique Tuffnell, who has quit the party, said she was frustrated with the French government forcing its extreme pension reform policies and failing to put in place initiatives to address environmental issues, among other things, saying, “I quit the party because there is no going back.”

Dr Eoin Drea, a senior researcher at the Wilfried Martens Centre for European Studies, said last October that anti-EU sentiment in France could eventually lead to Macron’s defeat in the 2022 election. He said, “The data show that Macron will lose the 2022 election.

He said, “The data show that while Macron appears to be powerful and ‘successful’ in Brussels, he is very unstable in France ahead of the next presidential election. He finds this ironic, as Macron did make Germany more inclined to France’s vision of European integration and a larger Europe during the communist virus epidemic. But in France itself, Macron is seen as part of the elite establishment.”

Macron won the 2017 French general presidential election with 66 percent support over his challenger Le Pen (34 percent), and during his tenure, France was one of the worst hit countries in the world by the CCP virus, and French health advisors have recently been advising Macron to introduce another foot ban to prevent French hospitals from having difficulty coping with the large number of patients with the CCP virus, which would be the third Time a foot ban has been announced in France. But if another foot ban is imposed, France’s economy will take another hit, and after a year-long foot ban and curfew, the French public seems to have had enough.

The Elabe poll showed that 38 percent of French citizens oppose a third foot ban, and Macron will try to avoid a repeat of the situation in the 2022 election that occurred in the 2019 European elections, where his opponent Le Pen won the support of people in remote and non-industrialized regions of northern, south-central and northeastern France. At the time, Christophe Guilluy, a French political commentator, warned that Macron’s camp was under siege.