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With the French right settled on its candidate in next year's presidential election, the left was openly feuding Monday over whether President Francois Hollande or his prime minister should be its standard-bearer. Manuel Valls, whose loyalty to Hollande was once a badge of honour, was to lunch with his boss on Monday with rumours swirling that he may use the occasion to tender his resignation and seek the presidency.
The meeting comes the day after Francois Fillon, 62, won a solid victory in Sunday's rightwing primary on an economically liberal platform, while Hollande has yet to announce whether he will stand for re-election. Far-right leader Marine Le Pen was already on the attack on Sunday, saying: "No candidate has ever gone so far in bowing to the ultra-liberal demands of the European Union."
The vice president of her anti-immigrant, anti-EU National Front followed up Monday by branding Fillon the candidate of "rampant globalisation". A Fillon presidency would be a continuation of Hollande's on both immigration and identity issues, Florian Philippot told French television. Le Pen, the anti-establishment candidate who is hoping to emulate Donald Trump's shock victory in the United States, is the "candidate of the nation state and patriotism", Philippot said.
Meanwhile Hollande and Valls were in open conflict, with the prime minister arguing he would be better placed to keep the Socialists in power. Party spokesman Olivier Faure painted the conflict in stark terms, saying that if Valls runs, "we are in a pretty unusual situation, what you could call a collective suicide". "The left will be eliminated for a long time," he warned on French radio.
On Sunday, Valls gave the clearest indication yet that he intends to challenge his boss, telling the Journal du Dimanche: "I'm getting ready." The 54-year-old premier said he would have a better chance given Hollande's disastrously low approval ratings and the "disarray" on the left.
"In the face of the disarray, the doubt, the disappointment, the idea that the left has no chance, I want to dispel the notion that defeat is inevitable," he told the weekly. Valls first broke ranks with Hollande early last month after the publication of an explosive tell-all book in which the president took swipes at judges, the national football team and even his own government's policies.
In the interview Sunday, Valls blamed the book, titled "A President Shouldn't Say This", for the Socialists' disarray, with polls showing neither he nor Hollande would make it past the first round of the presidential poll on April 23. Fillon is the front-runner, both for the first round and the May 7 run-off, when he is expected to go on to win handily against Le Pen.

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2016

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