France Is
Voting for Thousands of New Mayors. Here’s Why It Matters.
The
far-right party had first-round successes in several cities, but so did the far
left. Sunday’s second round may clarify who has real momentum.
Mark
Landler
By Mark
Landler
Reporting
from Paris
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/22/world/europe/france-mayors-elections-far-right.html
March 22,
2026, 12:01 a.m. ET
France’s
municipal elections, which began last week and end on Sunday, are being
scrutinized for what they may presage for the country’s presidential elections
next year. Among the big questions is whether France is on the cusp of a
populist, far-right wave like those that swept Argentina, Italy and the United
States in recent years. The answer, pending a second round of votes, is a
definite maybe.
Far-right
candidates performed strongly in the first round of voting a week ago in
several major cities, including Marseille, Nice and Toulon. That shows the
durable appeal of the National Rally party, which comfortably leads
presidential polls. But the party did less well outside its strongholds in
France’s south, and tactical voting in the second round could limit its gains
even there.
France’s
centrist parties, including that of President Emmanuel Macron, continue to
languish, reflecting deep-seated disenchantment with mainstream politics.
Turnout in the first round was the lowest since at least the 1950s, except for
the 2020 election, when the pandemic kept voters away.
“French
people are not uninterested in politics,” said Philippe Marlière, a professor
of French and European politics at University College London. “They just don’t
like the old ways of doing politics.”
How does
the election work?
To elect
its more than 34,000 mayors, France uses a two-round system: If no one wins an
absolute majority in the first round, the strongest performers proceed to a
runoff a week later. Most small-town elections were won outright last week, but
the races in many major cities require another vote on Sunday.
Like all
local elections, the races are driven primarily by parochial issues. But
France’s mayors help elect the Senate, so the results have national
implications.
What’s
the key race to watch?
The far
right has never run Marseille, France’s second-largest city, since the
restoration of French democracy after World War II. So for the National Rally —
whose candidate, Franck Allisio, finished just behind the city’s left-wing
mayor, Benoît Payan, last week — a victory would be a landmark breakthrough.
But Mr.
Allisio’s hopes of overtaking Mr. Payan in the second round were dented after a
far-left candidate dropped out, making it easier for Mr. Payan to firm up his
base.
Mr.
Allisio views Marseille as a template for how the National Rally could win the
presidency next year, under the leadership of Marine Le Pen or her protégé,
Jordan Bardella. Instead, he may end up as the latest populist politician to
channel the frustration of French voters, only to fall short when the
electorate gets a second look and recoils from the prospect of a far-right
government.
What does
the vote tell us about polarization?
The first
round highlighted just how polarized French politics have become.
The
far-left party, France Unbowed, also performed well, capturing town halls in
the working-class suburbs of Paris and in the economically depressed industrial
north. That suggests that the party’s pugnacious leader, Jean-Luc Mélenchon,
could play a consequential role in the presidential election.
Only a
month ago, France Unbowed was on its heels, implicated in a deadly attack on a
young right-wing activist, Quentin Deranque, that prosecutors said was carried
out by left-wing militants with links to the party. Separately, critics accused
Mr. Mélenchon of anti-Semitism after he deliberately mispronounced the name of
Jeffrey Epstein, the financier and convicted sex offender, at a rally.
And yet
the party beat expectations in Saint-Denis, a Paris suburb, and Roubaix, a
gritty textile town in northern France. Analysts said that anger over the war
in Iran may have propelled turnout among Muslims, who are often among the
party’s more reliable supporters.
What’s
happening in Paris?
Paris has
its own political weather system, often quite different from that in the rest
of France. Voters there are electing a successor to Anne Hidalgo, a Socialist
and the city’s first female mayor, whose popularity waned over 12 years in
office. In the first round, her former deputy, Emmanuel Grégoire, finished well
ahead of his rivals, suggesting the capital would remain in the hands of the
left.
Yet last
week, as the other candidates began horse-trading, Rachida Dati, a conservative
candidate who finished a distant second, suddenly emerged as a genuine rival.
Ms. Dati picked up the support of a center-right candidate and got a further
lift when a right-wing candidate withdrew from the second round to help her.
What does
the vote mean for President Macron?
Mr.
Macron isn’t on the ballot, but the vote will most likely underscore his lack
of domestic influence, given the struggles of centrist candidates. He said
little during the campaign, though with the weakened Socialists seeking
alliances with the far left after the first round, he finally spoke out. At a
cabinet meeting, his spokeswoman said, Mr. Macron “emphasized that party
agreements should not overshadow certain principles.”
Ana
Castelain contributed reporting.
Mark
Landler is the Paris bureau chief of The Times, covering France, as well as
American foreign policy in Europe and the Middle East. He has been a journalist
for more than three decades.


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