The
battle for Paris: can Rachida Dati fend off scandal to become next mayor?
Seen by
rivals as a dangerous rightwinger, others hope the controversial culture
minister can snatch Paris from the left
Angelique
Chrisafis
Angelique
Chrisafis in Paris
Sun 1 Feb
2026 14.00 CET
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/feb/01/paris-rachida-dati-mayoral-election-france
She was
the first woman of north African and Muslim heritage to hold a major French
government post and she redefined political celebrity in France. Now Rachida
Dati wants to become mayor of Paris and take the city from the left, which has
been in power for 25 years.
“I want
to bring back authority,” Dati, France’s culture minister, told Le Figaro last
month, promising a law and order drive to arm municipal police with guns. Her
opponents call her a dangerous rightwinger who would turn the French capital
into a “Trumpist laboratory”.
March’s
close-run mayoral election in Paris has become a policy battle for one of
Europe’s most densely populated cities, struggling with a housing crisis and
facing scorching summer temperatures amid climate breakdown.
Running
for the rightwing Les Républicains, Dati, 60, wants to increase policing and
CCTV, change the criteria for social housing to favour local workers, slash
debt, and – after dressing up as a refuse collector for a TikTok video – fully
privatise bin collection, which she says will give city employees more time to
sweep the streets. She has promised not to reverse the left’s flagship policy
of transforming a once traffic-clogged dual carriageway into a car-free
pedestrian walkway along the banks of the Seine, but will renovate those
pedestrian spaces. Though many on the left accuse her of seeking to undo green
policy, she said she would work to create green spaces and tackle extreme heat
and flood risks.
“Dati
will clean the streets and bring order and security!” said Sophie, 55, a former
marketing manager, as she handed out Dati’s leaflets on a street of butchers
and fruit shops near Paris’s central Les Halles. “She shows you can succeed in
France even if you weren’t born with a silver spoon in your mouth.”
Paris’s
longtime mayor, Anne Hidalgo, a member of France’s Socialist party, is not
running for a third term, and fears over Dati’s run for office have caused
Socialists, Greens and Communists to come together from the first round to try
to block her. Their candidate, Emmanuel Grégoire, a deputy mayor and Paris
Socialist MP, promised to increase social housing and defend the left’s
environmental legacy on lowering air pollution and building 112 miles (180km)
of cycle lanes. The city is also under pressure over the vetting of school
monitors after a scandal of child sexual abuse allegations in nursery and
primary schools.
Dati,
however, has challenges of her own. In September she will go on trial in Paris
for alleged corruption and abuse of power. She was accused of lobbying for the
Renault-Nissan carmaking group when she sat in the European parliament. Dati
has denied all wrongdoing.
Analysts
have said the election result is too close to call. “Everyone knows Rachida
Dati and her personal story – she has an extraordinary ability to connect,”
said Sylvain Maillard, a centrist Paris MP working on Dati’s campaign.
Dati has
said growing up as the second of eleven children on a low-income housing estate
on the outskirts of Chalons-sur-Saône in Burgundy gave her a greater
understanding of the French electorate.
“Candidates
talk of social housing in Paris, but I’m the only one who ever lived on an
estate,” she told voters on a BFMTV show. Her parents, from Algeria and
Morocco, couldn’t read or write so she did the family paperwork and was
educated at a private Catholic convent school after her father did building
work there.
“From 14,
I worked full time, door to door selling beauty products,” she said, describing
how she later escaped an arranged marriage.
Dati
became justice minister under Nicolas Sarkozy in 2007, breaking not just a
glass ceiling, but a “cast-iron one”, she said. She had a daughter while in
office but was back at her desk four days after the birth. “I inherited
nothing, everything I have I’ve worked for,” she said.
But Dati
faces challenges from smaller candidates who could eat into her vote. Sarah
Knafo, a European parliament member for the far-right anti-immigration
Reconquest party is hoping to make small gains in wealthy areas of the west of
the city. Knafo’s partner is the TV pundit Éric Zemmour who founded Reconquest
and has convictions for inciting racial hatred.
Knafo has
said she would be happy to work with Dati, which has been met with outrage on
the left. At a rally in northern Paris, Grégoire warned that if Dati won, the
capital would become “a Trumpist laboratory of the alliance between the right
and far-right”. Dati said she would not form an alliance with a party whose
founder was racist and had questioned her right to give her daughter a Muslim
name.
Dati also
faces competition from the centre. Pierre-Yves Bournazel, a longtime Paris
councillor and former communications adviser for Dati, is running against her
on a centrist ticket and is polling in third place. In a book published this
month, The Battle for Paris, Bournazel describes Dati during her time as
justice minister as being “inebriated with narcissism”. She in turn said he was
the “physical incarnation of the stupidest right on Earth”. At his campaign
headquarters in Paris, Bournazel said Parisians wanted more than a left versus
right battle “of the past”.
Vincent
Thibault, the director of opinion for the research and consulting firm Elabe,
said: “Rachida Dati’s strength is she is much better known than all the other
candidates … but her weakness is that she divides opinion more than her main
rival, Grégoire. Some 56% of Parisians have a negative opinion of Dati,
compared with 42% who have a positive opinion.”
Dati, who
for 18 years has been a local district mayor of the wealthy 7th arrondissement,
which includes government ministries and the Eiffel Tower, failed to win
Paris’s last mayoral race in 2020. But a recent change in the voting system to
allow a more direct vote for mayor could boost her.
“I’m sick
of living in a Disneyland for tourists,” said Frédérique, 59, a former nurse
who teaches medical students and would vote for Dati. She said Airbnb and
tourist rentals were hollowing out the city and independent shops were closing
as families were priced out of neighbourhoods.
National
politics could be reflected in the Paris vote. Grégoire’s united left is also
being challenged by Sophia Chikirou of the radical left party La France
Insoumise, led by Jean-Luc Mélenchon.
Nadia,
60, who taught tax law at a university, said: “We’ve had the left for 25 years
and that’s too long for any party to run the show.”
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