In a victory speech to supporters in Tulle, Hollande
declared his win "a great date for our country, and a new start for
Europe." The Socialist challenger promised to govern for all of France.
"Many people have been
waiting for this moment for many long years. Others, younger, have never
known such a time. ... I am proud to be capable to bring about hope
again," he told the cheering crowd.
"Tonight, there are not
two Frances. ... There is only one France, only one nation that is
united with the same destiny," Hollande said.
The president-elect, who
will be the nation's first left-wing president since Francois Mitterrand
left office in 1995, suggested there was a sense of relief in many
European countries because of his win.
"Austerity can no longer be something that is inevitable," he said.
Later, Hollande went to Paris, where he addressed a large crowd at the Bastille. Supporters waved flags and shouted his name.
"I know what many people
feel -- years and years of wounds, of ruptures, and we have to repair,
recover, unite. That is what we're going to do together," he vowed.
Hollande congratulated
Sarkozy, who earlier conceded to Hollande as results from exit polls and
official tallies in the runoff election came in.
François Hollande thanks supporters
Nicolas Sarkozy concedes election
Sarkozy loses presidency to Hollande
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"I carry the entire
responsibility for this defeat, and I'm going to say why. I fought for
the values of responsibility, and I'm not a man who does not accept his
responsibilities," Sarkozy said from his Paris campaign headquarters, as
members of the crowd shouted, "No!"
"I'm ready to become a
French person amongst French people, and more than ever I have the love
for my country deeply ingrained in my heart," Sarkozy said.
With almost all of the
votes counted, Hollande was leading with 51.6% to Sarkozy's 48.4%, the
nation's Interior Ministry said. Voter turnout was reported at more than
80%.
Exit polls said Hollande won 51.9% of the vote, France 2 television reported.
Crowds roared at the
center-left candidate's campaign headquarters as the exit poll results
came out Sunday evening. Celebratory car horns blared along the
Champs-Elysees in Paris.
"It's a great night,
full of joy for so many young people all across the country," said
Thierry Marchal-Beck, president of the Movement of Young Socialists.
U.S. President Barack
Obama called Hollande shortly after results were in to congratulate the
newly elected president and invite him to the White House.
Sarkozy had fought to
keep his job amid a wave of discontent over his inability to rein in
unemployment. He defended his economic record despite low growth and
unemployment at about 10%, saying the impact of Europe's debt crisis
could have been far worse.
France is a key player in plans to lead the eurozone out of its debt crisis, making the election vital to the region.
Sarkozy's defeat marks
the latest -- and most significant -- of at least half a dozen European
leaders swept from office during the eurozone economic crisis, including
the Greek and Italian prime ministers.
France's vote came the
same day as the Greek parliamentary election. Exit polls in that country
indicated Greece's ruling coalition appeared headed for steep losses,
while parties on the far left and far right were poised to make
significant gains amid anger over austerity measures.
Hollande and Sarkozy
traded insults last week in the only televised head-to-head debate of
the campaign. Sarkozy labeled Hollande a liar and a "little slanderer,"
while Hollande accused the president of shirking his responsibilities,
cronyism and favoring the privileged over France's poor.
Both candidates reached out to France's undecided voters since the first-round vote on April 22 left them the only two standing.
Centrist Francois
Bayrou, who took 9% of the first round vote, delivered a boost to
Hollande's campaign Thursday when he said he would vote for the
Socialist and urged his supporters to vote according to their
conscience.
Sarkozy has been president since 2007.
CDNN
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