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French leader Emmanuel Macron and the far-right's Marine Le Pen were preparing Tuesday for a crunch presidential election debate, with supporters of the president warning against complacency despite a solid poll lead.
Macron will go head-to-head with Le Pen late on Wednesday in their only direct clash ahead of Sunday's second-round vote, an encounter set to be watched by millions of voters.
Some polls are predicting a lead of around 10 points for Macron over Le Pen in the run-off, a repeat of the 2017 election. But undecided voters and abstentions could yet swing the figures.
Le Pen has cleared her diary to concentrate on preparing for the debate, hoping to avoid any repeat of the fiasco five years ago, when her ill-prepared performance contributed to her defeat at the hands of Macron.
This year's vote will mark the closest the far right has been to seizing the Elysee presidential palace. Marine Le Pen's father Jean-Marie was crushed by Jacques Chirac in the 2002 run-off election, and she was easily beaten by Macron in 2017.
The one-off live televised debate -- scheduled from 1900 GMT -- is a political tradition in France since 1974, when Socialist Francois Mitterrand took on centrist Valery Giscard d'Estaing.
It only failed to take place in 2002 when Chirac said debate was impossible with "intolerance and hatred" after Jean-Marie Le Pen stunned France by making the run-off.
- 'Kick in backside' -
The stakes in the election are high, with Europe watching to see if Macron wins another five years in office to work as a champion of the EU, which Le Pen has vowed to reform under a far-right presidency.
Opinion polls currently put the centrist Macron at 53 to 56 percent in the run-off against 44 to 47 percent for Le Pen -- a much tighter finish than five years ago, when Macron carried the vote with 66 percent.
For Le Pen, the debate represents a final chance to haul back ground in the polls and convince France she has moderated her anti-immigration party into a mainstream force.
Macron is likely to seek to portray her as a dangerous extremist who cannot be trusted on foreign policy -- especially after Russia's invasion of Ukraine, given her past comments of admiration toward President Vladimir Putin.
Both candidates are particularly keen to woo the electorate of hard-left candidate Jean-Luc Melenchon, who finished a strong third in the first round.
Le Pen was reportedly spending all Tuesday with her closest aides to rehearse the debate, having admitted previously that her performance against Macron in 2017 was not up to scratch.
"For me, failure is sometimes a kick in the backside," she told TF1 television.
Le Monde newspaper said Le Pen would seek to show herself as a credible leader of France and also portray the election as an anti-Macron "referendum".
She has "spent five years trying to bury that disastrous (2017) televised duel, by sprucing up her image, party and ideological tenets," it said.
- 'Either could win' -
Macron has insisted that he does not see the election as being in the bag, reminding voters of the political upsets of 2016 when Britons voted to leave the EU and Americans put Donald Trump in the White House.
Key allies have made clear that nothing should be taken for granted, telling voters tempted to stay at home that they must cast their ballots.
"The game isn't over yet and we certainly can't draw conclusions ... that this election, this match, is already decided," Prime Minister Jean Castex told France Inter radio.
"We have to convince the French that Emmanuel Macron's programmes are the best for France and for them," he said. He added that if Macron won, his government would resign to give the ruling party new impetus ahead of legislative elections in June.
Castex's predecessor as prime minister, Edouard Philippe, mayor of the northern city of Le Havre and a heavyweight centre-right backer of Macron, said nothing could be taken for granted due to the numerous "unknowns" hanging over the election and, above all, abstentions.
He told Le Figaro newspaper on Monday that the so-called Republican front -- which in past elections had seen French of all political stripes line up against the far right -- "was no longer a natural reflex".
"Right now, either candidate could win," added another ally, Francois Bayrou, the leader of the pro-Macron Modem party.
P.E.Steiner--NZN