People in France are voting in local elections in which the far-right National Front party is expected to score big gains.
Voters are electing representatives in 101 departments, or counties, charged with issues like schools and welfare.
Sunday's first round will be followed by a second in a week's time.
Polls suggest that the Socialists of President Francois Hollande will suffer another setback, after defeats in municipal and EU elections last year.
The BBC's Hugh Schofield in Paris says France's changing electoral map means the vote is a three-horse race.
The Socialists and the centre-right UMP have been joined by Marine Le Pen's National Front (FN), not as a freakish upstart but a serious contender for power, our correspondent adds.
The FN has benefited from economic stagnation, high unemployment, and general hostility to mainstream parties.
The governing Socialists and their left-wing allies are expected to take the biggest hit, losing many of the 61 departments they hold.
But the FN is also taking voters from the UMP, which has struggled to unify behind a single leader since the defeat of Nicolas Sarkozy in the 2012 presidential election.
Analysis: Lucy Williamson, BBC News, AisneApathy has traditionally favoured the FN, but France's two-round election system has tended to work against it. The second round of voting has in the past acted as a brake on the party - with voters from left and right uniting against it.
But with apathy and frustration growing, how much longer will those voters turn out to keep the FN from power?
A step nearer power for the National Front?
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