The French prime minister, Gabriel Attal, has urged all political parties to call for calm on a tense last day of campaigning for a snap election in which the far right hopes to win a majority in parliament.
"Violence and intimidation have no place in our society," Attal wrote in a social media post.
The interior minister, Gérald Darmanin, said: "This campaign is short and yet we already have 51 candidates, substitutes and activists who have been physically assaulted."
Darmanin told BFM TV that some of the assaults had been extremely serious and led to people being admitted to hospital. He said more than 30 arrests had been made across France and denounced what he called "a climate of great violence towards politics and all that it represents".
About 30,000 police will be deployed across France after the results on Sunday, including 5,000 in Paris and the surrounding area. Darmanin said he feared "excesses" and had asked the Paris police chief to ban street protests expected outside parliament on Sunday night. He said he feared the "ultra-left" above all. He also said he anticipated demonstrations in Lyon, Rennes and Nantes or "anywhere there is the ultra-right or ultra-left".
The Paris Bar Council has asked the public prosecutor's office to open a case after a far-right website called for the "elimination" of lawyers who had signed an article against Marine Le Pen's anti-immigration National Rally (RN).
The far-right party has said it could win an absolute majority of 289 seats in parliament and form a government. Latest polling, however, suggests it will fall short of that target, but it is expected to become the largest party. An Ipsos poll forecast the RN would get between 175 and 205 seats and Ifop pollsters put the figure at between 170 and 210.
Polls also showed that tactical voting could limit the RN's gains. Emmanuel Macron's centrists and a broad leftwing coalition agreed this week to withdraw more than 200 candidates from the final round to avoid splitting the vote against the RN.
Polls suggest only between a third and a half of centrists could switch to the leftwing alliance to fend off the far right, while perhaps two-thirds of left-leaning voters could back a centrist.
If the RN and its allies do not win an absolute majority but end up as the largest party, there could be deadlock in parliament and a struggle to form a government.
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