5
takeaways from France’s local elections
Both the
far right and far left did well in the first round. But much now depends on the
complex alliance building before the second round runoffs on March 22.
March 16,
2026 12:46 am CET
By Marion
Solletty
https://www.politico.eu/article/france-municipal-elections-5-takeaways-melenchon-le-pen-bardella/
PARIS —
Both the far right and far left made strong showings in the first round of
France’s municipal elections on Sunday, offering some early clues about which
way the political winds are blowing ahead of the all-important 2027
presidential race.
Still, it
is unwise to draw sweeping conclusions from Sunday’s results because much can
change in the second round. Lesser placed candidates are scrambling to form
alliances that could change the outcomes dramatically in the March 22 runoff.
The
National Rally scored well but didn’t deliver the landslides it craved in the
south, one of its regional strongholds. In key target cities such as Marseille
and Toulon, it now faces major scraps in the second round. Still, several of
its candidates garnered more than 40 percent of the vote, something many
centrist candidates can only dream of.
At the
other end of the spectrum, the France Unbowed movement of hard-left firebrand
Jean-Luc Mélenchon, performed better than expected in several cities such as
Lille and Roubaix in the northeast, confirming his status as a key player ahead
of next year’s presidential vote. His candidates’ strong performances will be a
headache for the moderate left, which is wary of an alliance with the
increasingly toxic M´élenchon, but not strong enough to dismiss him entirely.
Here are
POLITICO’s key takeaways on how the race is shaping up.
Strong
results, but no landslide for the far right
France’s
two-round electoral system has historically worked against Marine Le Pen’s
National Rally, including in elections of mayors and city councils, as ad hoc
alliances form before the runoff to block far-right candidates.
Marseille’s
incumbent mayor Benoît Payan speaks to the press following the results of the
first round of France’s 2026 municipal elections. | Thibaud Moritz/AFP via
Getty Images
This time
around, the party was hoping to capitalize on fighting between centrists and
leftists — as well as harnessing its growing nationwide appeal — to make a
breakthrough.
In that
regard, the first round delivered a mixed picture for the party. Incumbent
Mayor and party Vice-President Louis Aliot was reelected with an absolute
majority in Perpignan in the south, the only large city governed by the party.
But the
party failed to score a home run in Toulon, one of the cities it is hoping to
win. Its candidate, MP Laure Lavalette, one of Le Pen’s closest lieutenants,
will face an uphill battle against rivals in the second round.
Still,
the far right is progressing significantly in urban centers which have long
been strongholds of the center right and the center left.
The most
striking example is Marseille, France’s second-largest city, where National
Rally candidate Franck Allisio is neck and neck with incumbent Mayor Benoît
Payan, who has the support of several moderate left parties.
“These
results reveal an expectation that we know is immense,” National Rally
President Jordan Bardella said minutes after polls closed. “Change won’t wait
until 2027 — it starts this coming Sunday,” he added, referring to the second
round.
Still,
Allisio faces an uphill battle to win in the second round. The left-wing
candidate in Marseille, who has also qualified for the second round, is now
suggesting an alliance with Payan to keep the far-right candidate out.
Center
right feels the squeeze
President
Emmanuel Macron’s allies are under pressure across the country, where
center-right candidates are struggling to hold or win large cities because the
far right is siphoning off part of their electorate.
A case in
point is Nice, where Le Pen’s ally Eric Ciotti won more than 40 percent of the
vote, according to first estimates, making him the front-runner ahead of the
runoff against incumbent Christian Estrosi, who is supported by centrist
parties.
Ciotti
was president of Les Républicains from 2022 to 2024, but was ousted by his own
party in a dramatic coup after striking a deal with Le Pen’s National Rally
without the approval of his own troops.
The race
in Nice reflects both the struggle of traditional center-right forces to hold
off the far right and a bitter personal rivalry between Ciotti and Estrosi, a
former member of the conservative Les Républicains party.
Centrist
champion Edouard Philippe survives to fight another day
Former
Prime Minister Edouard Philippe had a scare after polling placed him neck and
neck with his Communist opponent, but the centrist frontrunner for the 2027
presidential election came comfortably ahead in the industrial city of Le
Havre.
Philippe,
who has already declared his candidacy for 2027, had said he would drop his bid
if he lost the mayoral race in Normandy, putting his political future in
jeopardy.
“Polls
are not elections; in a democracy, it is the voters who decide,” said Philippe
after the results dropped.
Hard left
scores high
France
Unbowed, Mélenchon’s hard-left movement, performed better than expected in key
target cities, a result that will increase the moderate left’s discomfort ahead
of the 2027 presidential race.
The prime
example is the northern city of Lille, where the France Unbowed candidate was
by one projection in a tie with the incumbent center-left mayor. France Unbowed
is also on track to come in first in Roubaix, a populous, working-class city on
Lille’s outskirts.
The
party’s prospects in this contest were very much in question after a
controversy surrounding the death of a far-right activist last month. But
France Unbowed’s strategy of focusing on young voters and working-class urban
populations, often of immigrant descent, is delivering despite repeated
controversies, particularly accusations of antisemitism against Mélenchon.
“This
election confirms that there is a strong France Unbowed constituency in big
cities,” said Jean-Yves Dormagen, a political scientist and head of polling
institute Cluster17.
Dormagen
also highlighted the highly polarized and fragmented nature of France’s
political landscape, confirmed by Sunday’s results. In many cities, up to four
or five candidates qualified for the runoff, a situation that used to be an
exception a few years ago.
Moderate
left will have a few headaches
This
fragmented political landscape is inflicting a series of splitting headaches on
France’s ailing moderates, especially on the left, where infighting was already
on display on election night.
The
moderate left is torn over whether to make ad hoc alliances with the hard-left
France Unbowed movement whose fiery leader has become highly toxic to centrist
voters.
“We won’t
overturn the far-right wave with Jean-Luc Mélenchon as our ball-and-chain,”
social democrat figurehead Raphaël Glucksmann, who has long criticized
Mélenchon’s outbursts and positioning, said Sunday.
That put
him at odds with against Green leader Marine Tondelier, who opened the door to
alliances with the radical left.
“I see
less differences between the lefts than between the left and the right,” she
said.
While the
Socialist Party has turned its back on Mélenchon at a national level, electoral
math may force some candidates to rethink at a local level.
In
important urban centers such as Nantes, Rennes, Marseille, and even Paris, the
road to victory could involve striking a deal with France Unbowed’s candidates
— all of whom have made the runoff. In others like Limoges and Toulouse, the
left has a chance of ousting an incumbent right-wing mayor — but France
Unbowed’s candidates are ahead of the Socialists.
The
Socialists can look to Paris with some dose of optimism. Their candidate
Emmanuel Grégoire came first by a comfortable margin in the capital over his
center-right rival Rachida Dati. But he is not guaranteed to win without the
hard left’s votes in the runoff.
“Next
Sunday will be a pivotal moment for Paris’ future. What’s at stake is how we
live together,” Grégoire said.
Sophia
Chikirou, from France Unbowed, dared him to team up, saying she was “waiting
for the call.”

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