President Emmanuel Macron said a simple "Thank you!” after winning reelection, and praised the majority who gave him five more years at the helm of France.
Macron also thanked people who voted for him not because they embrace his ideas but because they wanted to reject far-right rival Marine Le Pen.
"I’m not the candidate of one camp anymore, but the president of all of us,” he said. Macron comfortably won reelection to a second term on Sunday, according to polling agencies’ projections.
He arrived on the plaza where his supporters gathered, beneath the Eiffel Tower, to the sound of the "Ode to Joy,” the European Union’s anthem, hand in hand with his wife, Brigitte.
Emmanuel Macron interacts with voters on presidential election day.
French far-right leader Marine Le Pen hailed her score in presidential elections on Sunday as a "brilliant victory," despite her projected defeat to Emmanuel Macron.
Promising to "carry on" her political career, the 53-year-old vowed that she would "never abandon" the French after losing with around 42 percent of the vote to Macron's roughly 58.
"The ideas we represent have reached new heights... this result itself represents a brilliant victory," she told a crowd of supporters at an election-night party.
She joined other challengers eliminated in the first round in calling for a new effort to hinder the president's second term at June parliamentary polls.
"This evening, we launch the great battle for the legislative elections," Le Pen said, saying she felt "hope" and calling on opponents of the president to join with her National Rally (RN) party.
Both candidates had sought to rally supporters of hard-left chief Jean-Luc Melenchon to their side in the second-round run-off, after he came close to edging Le Pen out of the showdown with incumbent Macron.
Agencies