Francois Fillon has urged his conservative party to rally around him, saying that he was the only legitimate candidate despite calls by many in his camp for him to pull out of the French presidential race over allegations of misuse of public funds.
“It is time for everybody to get their act together and come back to their senses,” he told senior party members gathered to discuss the crisis, according to a text.
Fillon, who overwhelmingly won primaries organised by The Republicans party and their allies in November, added: “I call on all the women and men of goodwill to rally, respect the message our voters sent during the primaries and unite behind my candidacy, which is the only legitimate one.”
Earlier yesterday, Alain Juppe, another former prime minister, ruled out replacing the scandal-hit Fillon in the coming election but offered no alternative candidates, leaving conservative heavyweights scrambling to find a way to get their party back in the race.
Juppe, 71, was the most likely candidate to replace Fillon and unite their deeply divided Republicans party only seven weeks from the start of the two-stage election.
Polls suggested Juppe would be more popular with voters, but the centrist is considered too soft on immigration and other social issues for many of Fillon’s supporters on the right flank of the party.
“I confirm for a final time that I will not be a candidate to be president of the republic,” Juppe said in a downbeat statement that criticised Fillon and said France was “sick” and suffering from a “profound crisis of confidence”.
His decision removes a major rival for Fillon, who is sticking with his bid for power despite the prospect of criminal charges later this month as well as mounting criticism within the party and falling poll numbers.
The conservative 63-year-old was once the favourite to be France’s next leader but his campaign is mired in accusations he used public funds to pay his wife hundreds of thousands of euros for fake parliamentary jobs.
“No one today can prevent me being a candidate,” Fillon told France 2 television late on Sunday, emboldened by a rally of tens of thousands of supporters in Paris earlier in the day.
Party leaders met for crisis talks yesterday evening, with allies of former president Nicolas Sarkozy still pushing Fillon to step aside and name a replacement.
“He’s got some breathing space but he needs to ask himself if he can still win the presidential election,” one lawmaker known to be close to Sarkozy told AFP on condition of anonymity.
The infighting among Republicans and Fillon’s chaotic campaign have made an already unpredictable election even harder to call.
The disarray appears to have benefited centrist, pro-business candidate Emmanuel Macron in particular, as well as far-right leader Marine Le Pen, who are shown in polls to be the likely top two candidates in the first round of voting on April 23.
Polls suggest 39-year-old Macron would beat Le Pen in the decisive second round on May 7 – but after Donald Trump’s victory and Britain’s vote to leave the European Union, analysts caution against bold predictions.
Juppe, now the mayor of Bordeaux, voiced yesterday his critical view of the state of the election campaign.
“Never under the fifth republic have we had an election in such confused conditions,” Juppe said, stressing the dangers of National Front leader Le Pen’s “anti-European fanaticism” and Macron’s “political immaturity”.
Fillon’s defiance and accusations that the government, justice system and media were plotting against him have “led him into a dead-end”, Juppe added in one of several criticisms of his colleague.
Both Le Pen and Macron – one a far-right anti-establishment figure, the other an independent who founded a new political movement last year – have tapped into widespread anger at France’s political class.
“French people want a profound renewal of their politics,” Juppe, a veteran politician with a conviction over a party finance scandal, told a press conference in Bordeaux. “Evidently I do not embody this renewal.
National Front (FN) vice-president Florian Philippot said yesterday that many French people who were thinking of voting Fillon would now opt for Le Pen.
“They want a free, safe and prosperous France, not a France that is subjected to the most brutal winds of globalisation,” he told LCI television.
Current President Francois Hollande also warned in an interview published yesterday that the threat of a Le Pen presidency was real but that he would fight to prevent it happening.
Fillon, a devout Catholic, beat Juppe in the Republicans’ primary in November, pulling off a surprise victory by campaigning as a “clean” candidate.
He was the frontrunner in the presidential race until Le Canard Enchaine newspaper revealed in late January that he had paid his wife Penelope and two of their children nearly €900,000 ($950,000) as his parliamentary assistants.
Ahead of the crisis meeting of Republicans party leaders, Sarkozy had piled pressure on Fillon to meet Juppe and find a way out of the crisis.
The former president urged the two men to meet “to find a dignified and credible way out of this situation which cannot continue and which is creating serious problems for the French people”.