On May 7, 2017, Emmanuel Macron (LREM) won the second round of the presidential election against Marine Le Pen (FN), 66.1% against 33.9%.

Among the factors of this broad victory, the union of political parties of right and left in a front of common refusal: to prevent the extreme right from reaching the doors of the Élysée.

Can history repeat itself on the evening of April 24?

Polling institutes announce a much tighter duel, while many political scientists do not rule out a "political accident".

At the heart of this campaign between two rounds, Marine Le Pen in turn seized on this terminology, turning it against the Head of State: during her first campaign meeting, on April 14 in Avignon to "block against a new five-year term of Emmanuel Macron".

The far-right candidate can indeed ride the wave of dissatisfaction with "everything but Macron", an aspiration to "clearance" which animates several heterogeneous electorates, at the end of a five-year period punctuated by crises, such as that of yellow vests or that caused by the Covid-19 pandemic.

This week, Michel Cambon, in a humorous nod to Spanish history, draws this relative electoral asset of Emmanuel Macron in his campaign against Marine Le Pen.

Michel Cambon, known as "Cambon", has been a draftsman for thirty years in Grenoble.

He first published his works in Hara-kiri, the Almanach Vermot, the Grosse Bertha or Fluide glacial, then more regularly for Les Affiches de Grenoble, the Journal des Arts, as well as many other magazines, publications and websites.

He is the winner in 2013 of the Press Cartoon Europe prize for a satirical cartoon on the war in Syria.

Cartooning for Peace is an international network of cartoonists committed to promoting, through the universality of press cartoons, freedom of expression, human rights and mutual respect between populations of different cultures or beliefs.

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