Le Pen, who rails against "uncontrolled globalisation",
hopes to channel the same nationalist, anti-establishment
sentiment that propelled Trump to the White House and spurred
Britain's vote to leave the European Union [EU], and become the first
woman to lead France. She bills Macron, a pro-EU former investment banker, as a stooge of banks and the elite. "I think I'm best placed to talk to this new world that's emerging, to talk to the Russia of Putin, to the United States of Trump, to talk to the Britain of (Prime Minister Theresa) May... to talk to the India of (Prime Minister Narendra) Modi," she said in an interview.
French far-right candidate Le Pen copies Fillon speech
She said that was "because all of those countries are more
or less turning their backs on the ideology of free trade, of
competition and of undermining social protection. "So I feel much more in line with their political philosophy than with (German Chancellor Angela) Merkel's," she told Reuters, speaking at her campaign headquarters. Behind her stood the French national flag and a poster with the slogan "Choosing France".
Despite the Brexit vote, Britain says it remains a defender
of free trade. Trump has said he wants trade deals to work for
the United States.
Anti-Establishment
Le Pen goes into Sunday's decisive run-off the clear underdog, according to opinion polls. While her policies of economic nationalism and stinging anti-EU rhetoric strike a chord among workers in low-income areas, she struggles for support in France's main cities.
Poll projections: Macron, Le Pen go through to runoff in French vote
Macron calls her a demagogue and a heiress raised in a
chateau, with no experience outside far-right politics. The winner of the second round will lead a core member of the EU and the NATO alliance, a permanent member of the UN Security Council, and the euro zone's second largest economy.
Asked what she thought of the hurdles Trump had faced in his
first 100 days in office, including his failure to push a repeal
and replacement of Obamacare through Congress, a core campaign
promise, she said: "It shows the establishment exists and is trying to fight against the democratic result of the people. You can see that a part of the system is uniting to stop Donald Trump from putting in place the measures which were chosen by the people."
Asked about Trump's boast in a 2005 video about grabbing women by the genitals, she said: "It's true his comments were worthy of criticism but they were private comments ... what's most important is the policies he implements." "I don't think that he's implementing policies which aim to roll back the rights of women," she added.
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