France's presidential election outcome takes the world by storm with two non-traditional candidates moving forward.

  • Marine Le Pen, Emmanuel Macron don't belong to France's two main political parties
  • Macron wants to welcome refugees, while Le Pen wants stricter immigration laws

Emmanuel Macron and Marine Le Pen swept the polls with 23 percent and 21 percent, respectively.

And neither of these candidates are members of France's two main parties that have dominated since the 1980s.

Le Pen is a far right nationalist who has high demands for change in France's relationship with the European Union. If those demands are not met, she'll be backing a "Frexit" movement, according to CNN.

Macron, who has never ran for political office before, believes France must remain at the heart of Europe.

He also wants refugees to be welcome in France, while Le Pen wants stricter laws on immigration.

The results have led to some rioting in Paris overnight, but the final outcome is still two weeks away.

However, there has been positive reaction from the European Market. The averages for the Dow Jones, S&P 500 index and Nasdaq 100 have jumped Monday.

President Donald Trump called it a very interesting election happening in France.

The two candidates go head to head on May 7.