- UK to make case to Trump against whisky tariff: finance minister
- After Musk gesture, activists project 'Heil' on Tesla plant
- Career-high 54 for Gilgeous-Alexander as Oklahoma City roll Utah
- ICC prosecutor seeks arrest of Taliban leaders over persecution of women
- Syria's economy reborn after being freed from Assad
- Shoppers unaware as Roman tower lurks under French supermarket
- PSG finally click and fire warning shot to European rivals
- Saudi crown prince promises Trump $600bn trade, investment boost
- Unstoppable Sabalenka playing 'PlayStation tennis' says Badosa
- Sabalenka to take Badosa shopping after Melbourne rout - and pay
- Man City step up rebuild with signing of Marmoush for £59 million
- Stocks mainly rise after Wall Street's AI-fuelled rally
- Palestinian official says hundreds leave Jenin as Israel presses raid
- Sabalenka beats Badosa to make third straight Australian Open final
- Singer Chris Brown sues Warner Bros for $500 mn over documentary
- J-pop star Nakai to retire after sexual misconduct allegations
- More than 250 Bangkok schools close over air pollution
- Leaky, crowded and hot: Louvre boss slams her own museum
- Sabalenka tames Badosa to make third straight Australian Open final
- Man City step up rebuild with Marmoush signing
- Kremlin ready for 'mutually respectful' Trump talks
- Negligence played key role in Turkey ski resort deaths: expert
- Celtic cash in on Champions League lifeline offered by new format
- Real Madrid break billion-euro revenue barrier to top Money League
- Man City sign forward Marmoush from Eintracht Frankfurt
- WWF blasts Sweden, Finland over logging practices
- How things stand in China-US trade tensions with Trump 2.0
- Most Asian markets rise after Wall Street's AI-fuelled rally
- Colman to kick off Sundance as film world reels from LA fires
- Chief US diplomat vows 'unwavering support' for Israel
- Fire-hit Hollywood awaits Oscar nominees, with 'Emilia Perez' in front
- Nearly 200 Bangkok schools close over air pollution
- Daring attack pays off for Spain's Romo in Tour Down Under win
- Napoli host arch-rivals Juventus riding wave of Scudetto enthusiasm
- Alpine skiing: Five things about the Kitzbuehel downhill
- J-pop star Nakai to retire after sex misconduct allegations: media
- New rider in town: Somalia's first woman equestrian turns heads
- Melbourne doubles feud as Kichenok accuses Mladenovic of 'direct threat'
- Trump to take virtual centre stage in Davos
- Friedrich Merz: millionaire conservative on verge of German chancellery
- Trump's return darkens mood as Germany heads to elections
- Pochettino happy after 'amazing' USA beat Costa Rica
- Most Asian markets extend AI-fuelled rally
- Bangladesh student revolutionaries' dreams dented by joblessness
- S. Korea investigators recommend Yoon be charged with insurrection, abuse of power
- Solar power surpasses coal in EU for first time
- Musk, Wikipedia founder in row over how to describe 'Nazi salute'
- Axel Rudakubana: troubled teen whose knife rampage shocked Britain
- Sasaki vows to 'give best' to fire-torn LA at Dodgers unveiling
- UK teen faces sentencing over murders that sparked riots
Defections sap rightwing hopeful in French presidential race
The conservative right-wing challenger to Emmanuel Macron in the looming French presidential vote grappled Friday with a wave of defections, while hoping former president Nicolas Sarkozy would finally offer his full-throated support.
Valerie Pecresse, whose poll numbers have stagnated since winning the Republicains primary in December, suffered the high-profile desertions just days ahead of her inaugural campaign rally.
Her team is hoping the event in Paris on Sunday will inject fresh momentum into Pecresse's bid, revealing a more personal side to Sarkozy's former budget minister and now president of the greater Paris region.
On Friday, Pecresse finally met with Sarkozy for over an hour to discuss a campaign on which he has remained noticeably silent, at least in public.
"It was a conversation among friends, frank and warm," a smiling Pecresse told a scrum of journalists after the meeting, adding that she was "very happy with the meeting".
"It was very useful for me to have the advice of a former president," she said, while declining to say if she would indeed have his backing.
- 'Inward-looking?' -
Several former aides of the popular former president, however, have already jumped ship, saying they would not support their party's candidate.
On Wednesday, Eric Woerth, a Republicains heavyweight and Pecresse's former colleague in Sarkozy's cabinet, surprised loyalists by announcing he would throw his weight behind the incumbent president Macron.
"I don't agree with the party's message" of a France that is "nostalgic and inward-looking," he told the Le Parisien daily -- reportedly without even warning Pecresse ahead of time.
The Republicains mayor of Calais Natacha Bouchart, also close to Sarkozy, followed suit Thursday by saying Macron had been "attentive" to her coastal city's struggle to cope with migrants trying to reach Britain by sea.
And on Friday, another former Sarkozy minister, Nora Berra, told BFM television she would not support Pecresse.
Sarkozy has remained a fixture of the French right despite a series of legal convictions since failing to win his re-election bid in 2012.
His support is considered crucial for ensuring the Republicains base rallies behind Pecresse, who accuses Macron of being too weak on crime and immigration and simply "tells everyone what they want to hear".
But French daily Le Figaro reported Thursday that in private, Sarkozy has criticised Pecresse's campaign choices -- not least her choice of Paris for her first major rally -- and said "Valerie is all over the place" and "non-existent".
He is not expected to attend her rally at the Zenith concert hall on Sunday.
- 'Zemmour bounces back' -
Macron remains comfortably ahead at 23 to 25 percent in opinion polls, and is widely expected to finish on top in the first round of voting on April 10.
Another headache for Pecresse is that the upstart far-right candidate, the former TV pundit Eric Zemmour, is holding up in the polls and remains in contention to make it to the second round of voting.
Zemmour's views on French history and immigration, expressed with the clarity of someone who spent years as a commentator on prime time television, often chime with the hard right in Pecresse's own party.
An Ipsos-Sopra Steria poll of 12,500 people published Friday put Pecresse at 15.5 percent, just ahead of far-right contender Marine Le Pen at 15 percent, while Macron stood at 24 percent.
Zemmour, whose campaign late last year appeared on the brink after a series of mishaps, climbed up 1.5 points in the polls to 14.5 percent.
Analysts say the presidential vote will almost certainly boil down to a contest on the right, with no leftwing candidate currently polling in double-digits.
F.Bennett--AMWN