A man pastes electoral posters of French presidential election candidate Francois Fillon, on the streets of Marseille, yesterday.
Paris: Seven out of 10 French voters want conservative presidential candidate Francois Fillon to step down, an opinion poll showed yesterday, as the scandal over alleged “fake work” by his wife continued to blight his campaign.
Among rightwing voters, 53 percent want him replaced, the poll by Odoxa for France Info radio showed. That figure includes people who said they would vote for the far-right National Front (FN). Excluding FN voters, it was 36 percent.
Fillon has apologised to French people over the way hundreds of thousands of euros in taxpayers’ money were paid to his wife over many years, but has said the work she did was genuine and he did nothing illegal.
He has vowed to continue his campaign for the April election, despite losing his position as favourite to centrist rival Emmanuel Macron, and called the affair a plot by his political opponents. His lawyers are contesting legitimacy of an official investigation into the payments.
Fillon was elected to stand for his The Republicans party in a November primary.
He beat off the challenge of better-known candidates by presenting himself as an honest politician who would cut back on government spending.
His showing in polls has slumped in the two weeks since the “fake work” scandal broke. On Thursday, another poll showed his popularity rating had slid to 18th place from third. Macron held on to first place.
The original allegations were made in the satirical weekly le Canard Enchaine on January 24 and the saga has been frontpage news ever since.
Thursday’s edition of the weekly L’Obs magazine showed a mocked-up photograph of Fillon wearing a 17th-century wig and entitled Tartuffe - the name of a play by Moliere about a hypocrite.
Opinion polls show Fillon coming third in the first round of voting on April 23, behind Macron by a few percentage points, and with far-right National Front leader Marine Le Pen coming first.
The French electoral system puts the top two candidates from first round into a runoff against each other. Polls show either Macron or Fillon winning a runoff against Le Pen comfortably.
Meanwhile, Macron has called on US researchers, entrepreneurs and engineers working on climate change to come to France, since US President Donald Trump has expressed doubts about global warming.
In a video posted yesterday on his Twitter account, Macron said in English “I do know how your new president now has decided to jeopardised your budget, your initiatives, as he’s extremely skeptical about climate change.”
He has vowed to reinforce public and private investment in sectors linked to climate change.