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POLITICS

Chirac ‘will vote for Hollande’ – claim

France's former right-wing president Jacques Chirac will vote for the Socialists' Francois Hollande in Sunday's first-round presidential vote, a newspaper Tuesday quoted a source close to him as saying.

Chirac 'will vote for Hollande' - claim

French historian Jean-Luc Barre, who helped Chirac write his memoirs, told Le Parisien newspaper the former president had not been joking when he said he would back Hollande, who has spent most of his political life in Chirac’s hometown of Correze.

“Jacques Chirac is true to himself when he says he will vote for Francois Hollande,” Barre said.

“I visit him frequently, we have lunch and dinner together. After four years of discussions I believe I’m one of those who knows best how he thinks,” he said.

Chirac, who was president from 1995 to 2007 ruffled conservative feathers last year when he said he would vote for Hollande rather than President

Nicolas Sarkozy, his ostensible heir at the helm of the UMP party.

Although there is no love lost between the two right-wingers, Chirac, 79, caught flak from former allies and eventually tried to pass off his purported support for the Socialist as “Correze humour”.

France’s first Socialist president Francois Mitterrand sent Hollande to Correze, 400 kilometres (250 miles) south of the Paris, in 1981 to stand against Chirac in parliamentary elections.

Hollande ended up staying in the region, eventually winning a seat for the region and now heads its regional council.

Le Parisien said Chirac’s family was divided over who to back in the vote, with his wife Bernadette supporting Sarkozy.

French voters head to the polls on Sunday for the first-round vote, to be followed by a run-off election on May 6. Polls indicate Hollande is the clear favourite.

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POLITICS

France on alert for social media disinformation ahead of European polls

France has urged social media platforms to increase monitoring of disinformation online in the run-up to the European Parliament elections, a minister has said.

France on alert for social media disinformation ahead of European polls

Jean-Noel Barrot, minister for Europe at the foreign ministry, said two elements could possibly upset the poll on June 9: a high rate of abstentions and foreign interference.

His warning comes as French officials have repeatedly cautioned over the risk of disinformation — especially from Russia after its invasion of Ukraine — interfering with the polls.

To fight absenteeism, France is launching a vast media campaign to encourage its citizens to get out and vote.

As for disinformation, a new government agency mandated to detect disinformation called VIGINUM is on high alert, Barrot said.

The junior minister said he had urged the European Commission to help ensure social media platforms “require the greatest vigilance during the campaign period, the electoral silence period and on the day of the vote”.

He added he would be summoning representatives of top platforms in the coming days “so that they can present their action plan in France… to monitor and regulate” content.

VIGINUM head Marc-Antoine Brillant said disinformation had become common during elections.

“Since the mid-2010s, not a single major poll in a liberal democracy has been spared” attempts to manipulate results, he said.

“The year 2024 is a very particular one… with two major conflicts ongoing in Ukraine and Gaza which, by their nature, generate a huge amount of discussion and noise on social media” and with France hosting the Olympics from July, he said.

All this makes the European elections “particularly attractive for foreign actors and the manipulation of information,” he said.

Barrot mentioned the example of Slovakia, where September parliamentary elections were “gravely disturbed during the electoral silence period by the dissemination of a fake audio recording” targeting a pro-EU candidate.

A populist party that was critical of the European Union and NATO won and has since stopped military aid to Ukraine to fight off Russian forces.

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