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France: Hundreds celebrate as Le Pen's 'National Rally' pips Macron's 'On the March'02:09
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Hundreds of supporters gathered in Paris on Sunday to celebrate the victory of Marine Le Pen's 'National Rally' party over President Emmanuel Macron's 'On the March' in the European elections.

The far-right party, formerly known as the 'National Front', is expected to win 24 percent of the vote, narrowly beating the 22.5 percent expected for

'En Marche'.

Le Pen told supporters the old parties needed to be 'deleted', before signing off with the customary "long live the Republic and long live France."

One National Rally supporter said that "now the message is clear, the victory is beautiful, we're the first party in France now and it is a good step for the next presidential elections of 2022."

France: Hundreds celebrate as Le Pen's 'National Rally' pips Macron's 'On the March'

France, Paris
May 27, 2019 at 03:17 GMT +00:00 · Published

Hundreds of supporters gathered in Paris on Sunday to celebrate the victory of Marine Le Pen's 'National Rally' party over President Emmanuel Macron's 'On the March' in the European elections.

The far-right party, formerly known as the 'National Front', is expected to win 24 percent of the vote, narrowly beating the 22.5 percent expected for

'En Marche'.

Le Pen told supporters the old parties needed to be 'deleted', before signing off with the customary "long live the Republic and long live France."

One National Rally supporter said that "now the message is clear, the victory is beautiful, we're the first party in France now and it is a good step for the next presidential elections of 2022."

Description

Hundreds of supporters gathered in Paris on Sunday to celebrate the victory of Marine Le Pen's 'National Rally' party over President Emmanuel Macron's 'On the March' in the European elections.

The far-right party, formerly known as the 'National Front', is expected to win 24 percent of the vote, narrowly beating the 22.5 percent expected for

'En Marche'.

Le Pen told supporters the old parties needed to be 'deleted', before signing off with the customary "long live the Republic and long live France."

One National Rally supporter said that "now the message is clear, the victory is beautiful, we're the first party in France now and it is a good step for the next presidential elections of 2022."

Top downloads in last 24 hours
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