Macron campaign poster in Paris is covered with a Mélenchon sticker
Both Macron and Le Pen need to win over a chunk of the 7.7 million people who voted for the radical left candidate Jean-Luc Mélenchon, narrowly knocked out in the first-round ballot on 10 April.
In Trappes, south-west of Paris, where almost 61% of voters chose Mélenchon, opinion was divided this week about what to do next. Le Figaro newspaper suggested that “on the presidential motorway, Emmanuel Macron is trying a subtle turn to the left”. But the mayor of Trappes, Ali Rabeh, a former member of the Socialist party who campaigned for Mélenchon, said: “If Macron is going to say something it should be a clear message of compromise, not something vague like perhaps lowering his proposal for retirement at 65 to 64-and-a-half.”
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