Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

Key proposals by leading candidates in French election

-

The five main contenders in France's presidential election span the ideological spectrum from hard left to far right. A week before the first round of voting, here are their main proposals:

- Marine Le Pen: France first -

- Negotiate France's exit from the eurozone and return to the franc. Immediately suspend membership of the European passport-free Schengen area and restore border controls. Hold a "Frexit" referendum after six months of negotiations with Brussels on transforming the union into a club of nation states.

- Reduce legal immigration to 10,000 people per year, require refugees seeking asylum in France to apply in their home region, hold a referendum on reforms including introducing a French-first policy on jobs and housing

- Impose a 35-per-cent tax on products from companies that offshore factory jobs

- Lower the minimum retirement age from 62 to 60 and expand family subsidies.

- Pull France out of NATO's central command and develop closer relations with Russia.

- Emmanuel Macron: Economic 'liberation'

- Cut the corporation tax rate from 33 percent to 25 percent and give bosses more flexibility to negotiate working time with staff at the company level.

Centrist Emmanuel Macron wants to make all 18-to-21-year-olds do an obligatory month of military ser...
Centrist Emmanuel Macron wants to make all 18-to-21-year-olds do an obligatory month of military service
JEAN-CHRISTOPHE VERHAEGEN, AFP/File

- Give all workers, including the self-employed, access to unemployment benefits.

- Accelerate integration in the eurozone by giving it a central parliament, finance minister and budget. Organise democratic conventions in all EU member states to discuss reforming the bloc.

- Create tax incentives to encourage companies to hire jobseekers from underprivileged neighbourhoods

- Introduce one month's obligatory military service for all 18-21-year-olds.

- Francois Fillon: Shrinking the state -

- Cut 500,000 public servant jobs and reduce public spending by 100 billion euros ($106 billion) over five years to reduce France's debt.

- Scrap the official 35-hour working week. Progressively raise the working week for civil servants to 39. Allow companies to negotiate working time directly with employees. In the absence of an accord, apply a 39-hour rule.

- Ban the full-body Islamic burkini swimsuit and introduce uniforms in public schools.

- Reduce immigration by setting annual quotas.

Conservative Francois Fillon wants to ban the full-body Islamic burkini swimsuit
Conservative Francois Fillon wants to ban the full-body Islamic burkini swimsuit
Handout, MARKS AND SPENCER/AFP/File

- Work with Russia, Iran and the Syrian regime in combating the Islamic State.

- Jean-Luc Melenchon: Big spender -

- Renegotiate EU treaties. Get the union to scrap rules on fiscal discipline and allow the European Central Bank to buy up debt from member states. If talks fail hold a referendum on withdrawing from the treaties, leading to possible exit from the euro.

- Move from a presidential system to a parliamentary system. Give citizens more powers to propose referenda and recall lawmakers.

- Tax all annual earnings above 400,000 euros at 100 percent and increase public spending by 173 billion euros ($184 billion) over five years.

- End France's use of nuclear power and fossil fuels. Boost renewables, which would supply 100 percent of the country's needs by 2050.

- Foreign policy: Withdraw from NATO. Improve relations with Russia "to avoid war." Curry ties with the leftist Latin American ALBA grouping founded by late Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez.

- Benoit Hamon: Income for all -

- Introduce a universal basic income, initially targeting the working poor but eventually extended to all citizens, reaching 750 euros a month. Estimated cost of first phase: 35 billion euros a year.

Socialist candidate Benoit Hamon has pledged to legalise cannabis
Socialist candidate Benoit Hamon has pledged to legalise cannabis
KENZO TRIBOUILLARD, AFP/File

- Move towards a shorter working week by encouraging companies to allow more part-time work and sabbaticals. Tax robots that take human jobs.

- Increase company payroll taxes

- Increase the share of renewables in the energy mix to 50 percent by 2025. Ban harmful pesticides.

- Legalise cannabis.

The five main contenders in France’s presidential election span the ideological spectrum from hard left to far right. A week before the first round of voting, here are their main proposals:

– Marine Le Pen: France first –

– Negotiate France’s exit from the eurozone and return to the franc. Immediately suspend membership of the European passport-free Schengen area and restore border controls. Hold a “Frexit” referendum after six months of negotiations with Brussels on transforming the union into a club of nation states.

– Reduce legal immigration to 10,000 people per year, require refugees seeking asylum in France to apply in their home region, hold a referendum on reforms including introducing a French-first policy on jobs and housing

– Impose a 35-per-cent tax on products from companies that offshore factory jobs

– Lower the minimum retirement age from 62 to 60 and expand family subsidies.

– Pull France out of NATO’s central command and develop closer relations with Russia.

– Emmanuel Macron: Economic ‘liberation’

– Cut the corporation tax rate from 33 percent to 25 percent and give bosses more flexibility to negotiate working time with staff at the company level.

Centrist Emmanuel Macron wants to make all 18-to-21-year-olds do an obligatory month of military ser...

Centrist Emmanuel Macron wants to make all 18-to-21-year-olds do an obligatory month of military service
JEAN-CHRISTOPHE VERHAEGEN, AFP/File

– Give all workers, including the self-employed, access to unemployment benefits.

– Accelerate integration in the eurozone by giving it a central parliament, finance minister and budget. Organise democratic conventions in all EU member states to discuss reforming the bloc.

– Create tax incentives to encourage companies to hire jobseekers from underprivileged neighbourhoods

– Introduce one month’s obligatory military service for all 18-21-year-olds.

– Francois Fillon: Shrinking the state –

– Cut 500,000 public servant jobs and reduce public spending by 100 billion euros ($106 billion) over five years to reduce France’s debt.

– Scrap the official 35-hour working week. Progressively raise the working week for civil servants to 39. Allow companies to negotiate working time directly with employees. In the absence of an accord, apply a 39-hour rule.

– Ban the full-body Islamic burkini swimsuit and introduce uniforms in public schools.

– Reduce immigration by setting annual quotas.

Conservative Francois Fillon wants to ban the full-body Islamic burkini swimsuit

Conservative Francois Fillon wants to ban the full-body Islamic burkini swimsuit
Handout, MARKS AND SPENCER/AFP/File

– Work with Russia, Iran and the Syrian regime in combating the Islamic State.

– Jean-Luc Melenchon: Big spender –

– Renegotiate EU treaties. Get the union to scrap rules on fiscal discipline and allow the European Central Bank to buy up debt from member states. If talks fail hold a referendum on withdrawing from the treaties, leading to possible exit from the euro.

– Move from a presidential system to a parliamentary system. Give citizens more powers to propose referenda and recall lawmakers.

– Tax all annual earnings above 400,000 euros at 100 percent and increase public spending by 173 billion euros ($184 billion) over five years.

– End France’s use of nuclear power and fossil fuels. Boost renewables, which would supply 100 percent of the country’s needs by 2050.

– Foreign policy: Withdraw from NATO. Improve relations with Russia “to avoid war.” Curry ties with the leftist Latin American ALBA grouping founded by late Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez.

– Benoit Hamon: Income for all –

– Introduce a universal basic income, initially targeting the working poor but eventually extended to all citizens, reaching 750 euros a month. Estimated cost of first phase: 35 billion euros a year.

Socialist candidate Benoit Hamon has pledged to legalise cannabis

Socialist candidate Benoit Hamon has pledged to legalise cannabis
KENZO TRIBOUILLARD, AFP/File

– Move towards a shorter working week by encouraging companies to allow more part-time work and sabbaticals. Tax robots that take human jobs.

– Increase company payroll taxes

– Increase the share of renewables in the energy mix to 50 percent by 2025. Ban harmful pesticides.

– Legalise cannabis.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

You may also like:

World

The world's biggest economy grew 1.6 percent in the first quarter, the Commerce Department said.

Business

Electric cars from BYD, which topped Tesla as the world's top seller of EVs in last year's fourth quarter, await export at a Chinese...

World

NGOs allege the loan is financing the Suralaya coal plant, which is being expanded to ten units - Copyright AFP/File BAY ISMOYOGreen NGOs have...

Business

A diver in Myanmar works to recover a sunken ship in the Yangon River, plunging down to attach cables to the wreck and using...