French president Nicolas Sarkozy's chances of holding on to power were fading two days before France's election runoff, with far-right and centrist leaders refusing to endorse him and his usually bland Socialist rival performing confidently in a TV debate.
The last opinion polls published today before Sunday's vote suggested that Socialist challenger Francois Hollande's lead has narrowed to as little as five percentage points from as much as 10 in the last few days as the race has tightened.
However, centrist Francois Bayrou buried one of Mr Sarkozy's last hopes of catching up when he announced he would vote for Hollande on Sunday and left his supporters free to make up their own minds.
Mr Bayrou, who came fifth in the first round with 9 per cent, attacked Mr Sarkozy's tough talk on immigration and Europe, aimed at winning over the nearly one in five voters who picked far-right leader Marine Le Pen in round one.
The anti-immigration National Front leader also snubbed Mr Sarkozy this week saying she would cast a blank vote on Sunday.
A bitter Mr Sarkozy retorted today that Mr Bayrou "indicated that having thought about it carefully, he would vote for Francois Hollande and went on to say 'who would lead the country to bankruptcy in February'."
Opinion polls conducted since Wednesday evening's television debate found Mr Sarkozy making up ground against Mr Hollande. However, the challenger's reduced advance would be tough to overcome so close to the vote.
Two polls by Ipsos and BVA found Mr Hollande's lead had narrowed by one percentage point, with 52.5 per cent of voting intentions to Mr Sarkozy's 47.5 per cent.
Surveys by CSA and Harris Interactive showed Mr Hollande's lead shrinking from eight points to six after the debate, with 53 per cent support to Mr Sarkozy's 47 per cent.TNS-Sofres showed Mr Hollande's score edging down 1.5 points to 53.5 per cent from last week, with Mr Sarkozy rising to 46.5 per cent from 45 per cent previously.
Despite his lead, Mr Hollande said he could not totally rule out the possibility of defeat because the participation rate, transfer votes from eliminated candidates and blank votes would be key. Moreover, he said that he never underestimated Mr Sarkozy.
"Where he made a mistake is that he underestimated me," Mr Hollande said in an interview on RTL radio. "In politics, he who underestimates is too confident in himself and commits an error of judgment."
Having lagged the blander but more popular Mr Hollande for weeks now in polls, Mr Sarkozy's best hopes of clinching a second term hinged on winning the support of around 80 per cent of Ms Le Pen's voters for Sunday and at least half of Mr Bayrou's.
Mr Bayrou objected to Mr Sarkozy's lurch to the right."The line Nicolas Sarkozy chose between the two rounds is violent. It contradicts our values," he said, explaining his decision to reject the incumbent who is closer to him politically than Mr Hollande.
Mr Sarkozy recalled that Mr Bayrou had not voted for him in 2007 and put his decision down to personal "bitterness".
Mr Hollande welcomed Mr Bayrou's backing but ruled out forming an alliance with him or giving his party posts in the government should he win the election. "He (Bayrou) could have stuck to not voting for Nicolas Sarkozy," Mr Hollande said. "But he went even further and I think he can convince men and women who are not on the left."
Compounding a black week for the president, Mr Sarkozy came across as agitated and tense in the nearly three-hour debate and failed to land a knockout blow on his challenger, who appeared more poised and confident.
Several surveys of people who watched the debate found that most felt Mr Hollande was more convincing than Mr Sarkozy.
Mr Sarkozy has fought an uphill battle for re-election as economic gloom, his failure to keep a 2007 promise to cut unemployment to 5 per cent, and a dislike of his brash and showy manner have turned many former supporters against him.
The rivals held their last big rallies yesterday.
In the southern city of Toulon, Mr Sarkozy implored voters not to elect what would be the first left-wing president in 17 years while, further west in Toulouse, Mr Hollande supporters cheered Mr Bayrou's decision to vote for their candidate.
Today is the last day of official campaigning before a blackout from midnight.
Voting booths open at 8am on Sunday and close either at 6pm or two hours later in big cities.
Reliable projections of the result based on a partial vote count will be published once the last polling stations close.
The runoff coincides with parliamentary elections in Greece, where voters are set to punish mainstream parties for imposing austerity, and a week before a major German regional election when Chancellor Angela Merkel may suffer a mid-term rebuff to her strict austerity policies.
For French voters, the economic crisis, Europe's debt woes and pressure on household incomes have been the overriding issues, driving the wave of support for Ms Le Pen's National Front.
"It's the people who are really struggling financially who vote for Le Pen," said Dominique Reynie, a professor at Sciences Po University and head of the liberal think tank Fondapol.
"For the runoff, people voting for Sarkozy are thinking about somebody who can lead in Europe and handle the crisis. Those who vote for Hollande are thinking about their own purchasing power and social well-being."
Reuters