Meet the next president of France
By Conal Urquhart in London | chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2017-04-26 10:09
After the first round of voting, Emmanuel Macron and Marine Le Pen, have begun campaigning to be elected French president in earnest. There were 11 candidates in the first round but only two in the second round. One of these candidates will be voted the President of France for the next five years on May 7.
Name: Emmanuel Macron
Age: 39
Family: He was born in Amiens to a paediatrician mother and a neurologist father. His younger brother and sister became a cardiologist and a nephrologist respectively. He is the only member of his family not to study medicine.
Partner: In 2007, Macron married Brigitte Trogneux. The couple met when Macron was 15 and Trogneux was his 39-year old teacher but they only officially became a couple when he turned 18. Trogneux was previously married with three children, the eldest of whom is two years older than Macron.
Education: Philosophy at the University of Paris, Masters in Public Affairs in the Institute of Political Studies and civil service training at the National School of Administration, where almost all senior civil servants and politicians are educated.
Professional Experience: Inspector of finances at the ministry of the economy and then an investment banker at Rothschilds
Political Experience: He was a deputy secretary general in the office of President Francois Hollande before being appointed minister of economy and finance in 2016.
Party: Macron left the Socialist Party in 2015 and set up the En Marche! party in 2016.
En Marche was founded to break France's reliance on either the Gaullist/Republican or the Socialist party. It has no elected officials.
Policies: Macron wants to reduce the size of the French state and its spending, make the economy more competitive and is strongly in favour of France's role in the EU and NATO.
He is pro-American and was the only one of the four leading candidate who did not call for a rapprochement with Vladimir Putin and Russia.
On the economy he wants to reduce government spending by 60 million euros and increase investment by 50 million euros.
Odds on victory: 88 percent