Hugo A. Sanchez/©Gulf News

Emmanuel Macron now faces Marine Le Pen. But from polls to patriotism, there’s so much more we can discern from the first-round result as the France goes to polls today for a decisive second round.

1. Never mind who actually won more votes, Marine Le Pen of Front National is described as storming into the final straight of the French election. Glancing at many British papers, it would make us think she is the victor or the preferred candidate — when in fact it looks like a shoo-in for Emmanuel Macron.

The tacit support from the right-wing press for a fascist is more than alarming. She is described as simply culturally and economically protectionist — but is profoundly anti-immigrant, and speaks of a clash of civilisations. Only recently she denied French involvement in the wartime rounding-up of Jews to be murdered in the camps. This is reminiscent of her father’s dismissing the Holocaust as a “detail” of history.

2. The narrative of the far-right surge across Europe may be, if not broken, then disrupted. United States President Donald Trump and former leader of the United Kingdom Independence Party Nigel Farage’s preferred candidate did not win. Geert Wilders did not win. The Austrian far-right did not win. Macron has won — by forming a new party. Clearly inexperienced, he may find it hard it run the assembly: Some say France will be ungovernable. But his victory in the first round certainly cheered up the pro-European globalists.

3. The polls were more or less dead on. Will we reconcile with pollsters again, and forgive and forget?

4. Macron made an important distinction between patriotism and nationalism. You can love your country without wanting to be a racist anti-immigrant party. This kind of centrist populism, seen as Blairite, is unashamedly liberal through and through, and therefore a rebuttal of the scenario we have been told is inevitable: The swerve of an entire continent to the Right.

5. The rejection of elites manifests itself in several ways. In France, it has become a clear rejection of the traditional ruling parties. The Pasokification of the Left continues. UK’s Labour has to watch this. Once-great parties can lose their grip quite quickly. The fantasy of a British Macron — described sometimes as a centrist, sometimes as centre-left, sometimes dismissed as an establishment banker — is strong. Is this a new kind of centrist populism? And can we have some of it?

6. The French seem remarkably unbowed by the recent acts of terror. Only Le Pen tried to use them to shore up her support. French voters appear to be capable of nuance and reason. To be honest, this is not how the French see much of their own electorate, do they?

7. Jean-Luc Melenchon may have given a good hologram, but his refusal to swiftly endorse Macron was shocking and shabby. The hard Left’s hesitation to call out a fascist leaves a bitter taste.

8. The British are slightly jealous of the French electoral system. People in France will have it done and dusted today, while those in Britain will still be in the middle of what appears to be the election of doom.

9. Sweeping generalisations about how young people vote are out. The narrative of the Ukip/Brexit/Tory vote being that of the older generations is not repeated in France. Le Pen picked up a fair number of young voters; they will be there for coming elections. So while there is some solace in Macron’s likely victory, the Front National has become a respectable choice.

10. French people are just French. Which means more sophisticated. I loved that Macron is often described as “cultivated”. This means he reads books and had an affair with his French teacher, who also coached him drama, when he was 16. She divorced her husband and father of her three children. This is a man who knows what he wants. Let’s hope he gets it.

Vive la difference (long live difference).

— Guardian News & Media Ltd

Suzanne Moore is an award-winning columnist for the Guardian