Mira Kamdar | NYT SYNDICATE

PANTIN, France "Anyone but Le Pen." That was the refrain at an open-air market on Wednesday in this banlieue, just northeast of Paris, when I asked people about France's presidential election on Sunday.
Marine Le Pen, the candidate of the far-right National Front, has a good shot at winning first or second place in this first round of voting, which would qualify her for the May 7 runoff. But polls show a tight contest among her and three other candidates, so the people of France wait anxiously to find out who will make it to the final vote.
For many in Pantin, a traditional left-wing bastion that is home to many Muslim immigrants, what makes the suspense so excruciating is the tainted lineage of Le Pen's party, which her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, helped found. He has called the holocaust a"detail" of World War II. Though Le Pen has worked hard to prettify the National Front as a populist, anti-European Union party, there is no avoiding the ugliness of what it stands for. And as her poll numbers have softened in recent days, she has hardened her anti-immigrant and anti-Muslim rhetoric.
Adding to voter anxiety is the terrorist threat. On Tuesday, French authorities said they had thwarted an attack by two men who were harbouring weapons and explosives in Marseilles and wanted to disrupt the election. Then, as the 11 presidential candidates were being interviewed in their final appearances on French television on Thursday night, a gunman opened fire on police officers on the Champs-'c9lys`es in Paris. He killed one officer and wounded two others and a tourist before he was shot dead. The Islamic State swiftly claimed responsibility.
The reaction of the two leading candidates could not have been more different. Le Pen blamed government"laxity" and"naivet`" toward terrorists, while Emmanuel Macron, an independent centrist, said the terrorist threat"will be a fact of daily life in the coming years."
It is impossible to know how the attack will affect the election because so many people remain undecided, and may in the end submit blank ballots a popular form of protest in France. Some 30 percent of registered voters may not show up at all compared with 20 percent in the first round of voting in 2012 making it likely that abstention will be the most popular choice in the early balloting.
The latest polls show Le Pen and Macron in a virtual tie, though Macron edged ahead on Friday with 24 percent to Le Pen's 22.5. Macron, of the new centrist party En Marche! (or Onward!), is staunchly pro-European Union and promises to be both business-friendly and a protector of France's generous social programmes. But he suffers from having been minister of finance under President Francois Hollande, who is so unpopular that he isn't running for re-election. The candidate of Hollande's Socialist Party, Beno'eet Hamon, is trailing badly, with a projected 7 percent of the vote.
Close behind Macron and Le Pen are the centre-right R`publicains candidate Francois Fillon and the far-left populist Jean-Luc M`lenchon. They are also virtually tied, with Fillon at 19.5 percent and M`lenchon at 18.5. Fillon, who was the front-runner after an upset in his party's primary, lost support after it was revealed that he had paid his wife and children about $1 million in public money that they may not have earned. M`lenchon had an astonishing last-minute surge after performing well in televised debates, and in a show of how modern, even futuristic, he is, his campaign has used holographic appearances to simultaneously reach supporters in multiple cities.
While people interviewed at the market were unanimous in their aversion to Le Pen, they were split on whom they were for. That could be a sign of how Pantin, the"Brooklyn of Paris," has changed with the arrival of arty types and young families who can't afford Paris proper. In addition, some were adamant that if their candidate didn't make it to the second round, they would not be able to choose another. One man said,"If Fillon isn't on the final ballot, my decision is simple: I'm going fishing."
This important election may be decided simply by turnout. The winner could lead France into a Brexit-style referendum on European Union membership. The country could veer far to the left with potentially huge effects on global markets or hard right, setting off a Trump-administration-style witch hunt against immigrants, especially Muslims. Of the four leading candidates, all but Macron are likely to be friendlier to President Vladimir Putin of Russia.
Whatever happens, the French will probably remain as politically divided after the election as they are now. Hannah, a 45-year-old woman at the market on Wednesday, said she would vote for Hamon."The election will be a catastrophe," she said."France is divided in four. Whatever the result, three-quarters of the people will not be happy."