Jean Todt is favored against Ari Vatanen when the new president of motor racings governing body is decided on Friday. Todt will have the backing from influential and outgoing FIA president Max Mosley. The 63-year-old Frenchman arrived for the voting in the company of another big backer,seven-time F1 champion Michael Schumacher. F1 boss Bernie Ecclestone also firmly supports Todt. Vatanen also filed in ahead of the vote at a hotel near FIA headquarters. Voting was starting at 10:30 a.m. (0830 GMT). Todt is a former Ferrari team principal who revived the fortunes of the flagging Italian team,and led them during the Schumacher golden era. He also worked on FIAs World Motor Sport Council. The 57-year-old Vatanen is a former world rally and Paris-Dakar champion from Finland who once raced under Todt in the 1980s. He hopes his pledge to clean up a sport hit by Formula Ones scandals is enough to beat Todt. Todt cites affordability and competition,innovation and excellence as the cornerstones of his election campaign. Todts style of leadership will be similar to Mosleys and offer continuity. He will likely keep most of the current senior FIA officials in their positions. Vatanen has the support of three-time F1 champion Jackie Stewart and vows to introduce a code of ethics to FIA if he wins - a clear attempt to prove his intention to clean up motor racings premier series. Mosley steps down after four terms that were characterized by political battles and personal indiscretions. Although he oversaw enormous commercial growth in F1,and helped implement stricter safety conditions,his achievements were overshadowed by reports of the 70-year-old Englishmans participation in a sadomasochistic sex session with five prostitutes last year. Mosley exits at the tail end of another tumultuous year in F1 politics. Renault received a suspended lifetime ban for ordering Nelson Piquet Jr.s crash at the 2008 Singapore Grand Prix to help his teammate Fernando Alonso win the race,while teams threatened a breakaway series after the FIA proposed a budget cap. Vatanen has promised a more transparent decision-making process if elected.