France’s far-right leader Marine Le Pen faces the biggest test yet of her six-year drive to improve the image of her party as she seeks to entice new voters needed to make her president.
Her task was underlined yesterday when her National Front (FN) party removed its interim leader Jean-Francois Jalkh after reported comments about a Holocaust denier.
To stand a chance of winning, Le Pen will need to convince people like pensioner Jacques Villain and student Marina Campana ahead of the final round of the presidential election on May 7.
Both of them backed defeated candidates in the first round last weekend and now face a choice between Le Pen and pro-European centrist Emmanuel Macron in the run-off.
Villain, a retired pensioner in Nice, supported defeated conservative Francois Fillon while Campana, a 19-year-old who attends university in the southern city, voted for far-left firebrand Jean-Luc Melenchon.
But both ruled out a vote for Le Pen, saying the main reason was her association with racism which she attempted to erase when she took over FN in 2011.
Villain, out for a walk on the famed waterfront promenade in Nice that was the scene of a deadly Islamist-inspired truck rampage last July, said he would vote for Macron out of duty, not conviction.
“The National Front is not a normal party,” he said. “It brings back bad memories” of France’s past.
Campana said ahead of a campaign rally by Le Pen in Nice on Thursday: “There are things she says on immigration and security and I just don’t agree.”
Their views are far from universal - some voters encountered in the traditionally right-wing city said they would switch to Le Pen - but there remains wariness among a large part of the electorate.
This explains in part why polls show Le Pen would lose the second round by a large margin, 40% to 60% for Macron, if it were held today.
One in four Fillon supporters and fewer than one in five Melenchon voters currently plan to vote for her, according to an Ifop poll released on Thursday.
This dynamic gives the 48-year-old Le Pen a tricky balancing act ahead of the runoff: keeping her core far-right supporters happy, while appealing to a wider electorate who need to be reassured.
She gave a hint of this on Thursday evening as she addressed the rally in Nice that mixed attacks on Macron - the candidate of the banks and “oligarchs” - with messages to moderate voters.
The tone was markedly different from her speeches of the last fortnight which dwelt extensively on immigration and the perceived loss of French identity.
She quoted Jean Jaures - a famed former Socialist leader beloved on the left - and namechecked Charles de Gaulle, the founder of the French republic and hero on the right.
Le Pen also addressed anxiety among voters about her plans to pull France out of the European Union and replace the bloc with a club of independent nations.