French campaign revs up with rival rallies, May Day marches

Independent centrist presidential candidate Emmanuel Macron makes a sign to bystanders as he leaves the Holocaust memorial in Paris, France, Sunday, April 30, 2017. French presidential candidate Emmanuel Macron is visiting the Holocaust Memorial in Paris with a somber message: Never again. (AP Photo/Michel Euler)

PARIS (AP) — France’s tense presidential race is colliding with May Day labor marches in a campaign dominated by worries over jobs and seen as a test of populism’s global appeal.

Less than a week before Sunday’s runoff, far-right leader Marine Le Pen and centrist Emmanuel Macron are holding separate rallies Monday.

But Le Pen’s efforts to clean up her National Front party’s anti-Semitic image could be undermined by a parallel Paris event by her father, Jean-Marie, expelled from the party over his extreme views.

Meanwhile, the traditional May 1 union marches across France celebrating workers’ rights will be politically charged this year. Some groups want a united front to keep Le Pen from the presidency, but unions fear Macron will dismantle worker protections.

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