The interview came a few days after the first round of the presidential election took place in France, in which independent candidate Emmanuel Macron received 24.01 percent of the votes, more than any other candidate.
Marine Le Pen, the right-wing populist leader of the National Front, came in second with 21.53 percent.
Both are now preparing for the second round of elections, which is to be held on May 7.
The two candidates succeeded in defeating the center-right candidate Francois Fillon, who obtained 19.91 percent of the vote, as well as the radical leftist Melenchon, who gained 19.64 percent.
Marine Le Pen: #Fillon betrayed his voters by asking to vote for #Macron.
— Avanti Populists! (@abermans) 26 апреля 2017 г.
Lets hope they know better!#Marine2017 #LePen #AuNomDuPeuple pic.twitter.com/LnYljrD7oE
Notably, presidential candidate Francois Fillon, who failed to make it to the runoff, urged voters to vote for Macron, claiming that "far-right leader Marine Le Pen would bankrupt France if elected," according to Reuters.
However, some members of the Republicans party have reportedly urged voters to support neither Macron nor Le Pen during the runoff vote.
This, in turn, adds to the confusion that currently prevails on the right of the political spectrum in France, reflecting an election in which the country's traditional left-right dichotomy (which itself dates back to the early, post-revolutionary days of the French National Assembly) was called into question.
"For a very long time, they have said that Macron is the second Hollande and that Macron is the illegitimate son of Hollande and the financial world. And now some of them, including Fillon, call [on voters] to back Macron. This causes confusion among some of the Republicans party activists," Bercoff said.
Yannick Moreau, for his part, warned against voting for either of the two presidential hopefuls during the runoff.
A country divided. Yellow: Macron ahead. Grey: Le Pen. (Blue, Fillon. Red, Mélenchon.) courtesy Le Monde. pic.twitter.com/7iIaDknKTj
— Pierre Briançon (@pierrebri) 24 апреля 2017 г.
"Here we are dealing with inconsistency, which must be avoided at all costs. I think that the right-wing party members calling for support for Macron is a sign of irresponsibility on the part of political figures," he said.
"I can understand when they say that there is no need to vote for Marine Le Pen, but at the same time, it's necessary to say that voters should support neither Marine Le Pen nor Emmanuel Macron," according to Moreau.
"Voting for Emmanuel Macron means that a person wants to back the continuation of disastrous rule of [current French President] Francois Hollande. If you like Hollande, you will be crazy about Macron," he said.
In the meantime, a fresh OpinionWay poll revealed on Wednesday that far-right presidential candidate Marine Le Pen had improved her chances to beat independent Emmanuel Macron by 1 percent since Tuesday but is still expected to lose the second round of the election.
According to the survey, Le Pen is estimated to secure 40 percent of votes in the runoff against Macron's 60 percent.
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