France’s
municipal elections will be telling for Europe
The
question is no longer whether the far right can compete nationally, but whether
the political forces that once stopped it still exist.
March 10,
2026 4:00 am CET
By
Mujtaba Rahman
Mujtaba
Rahman is the head of Eurasia Group’s Europe practice. He posts at @Mij_Europe.
https://www.politico.eu/article/france-municipal-elections-telling-europe-eu/
Next
week’s French municipal elections may be local in scope, but their implications
are unmistakably national — and European.
When
French voters head to the polls to elect roughly 35,000 mayors across their
villages, towns and major cities, they will offer up the clearest indication
yet of the country’s political mood ahead of next year’s presidential election,
which could both fundamentally reshape France and destabilize the EU.
Municipal
contests rarely predict presidential outcomes, as local personalities,
alliances and grievances often blur the national picture. But with early
polling for next year’s race already giving the far-right National Rally party
(RN) a commanding advantage, the local vote carries unusual significance. The
question is no longer whether the far right can compete nationally, but whether
the political forces that once stopped it — the “Republican Front” — still
exist.
Several
mayoral races in particular will serve as early stress tests for France’s
fragmented political center.
The port
city of Le Havre, for example, will likely prove especially consequential.
Incumbent Mayor and former Prime Minister Edouard Philippe remains one of the
most credible mainstream figures capable of challenging the far right next
year, and current polling suggests he could attract around 16 percent of the
national vote — enough to emerge as a unifying candidate if the country’s
divided center were to consolidate behind him.
A Le
Havre defeat, however, would destroy Philippe’s presidential prospects before
they even materialize. And the most recent polls suggest he could lose to a
moderate-left coalition led by unionist Jean-Paul Lecoq in the second round
despite leading in the first.
Then,
further south, the three Mediterranean cities of Nice, Marseille and Toulon
will reveal whether the RN is able to translate its national momentum into
actual governing power in some major urban centers. And while Toulon has
elected a far-right mayor before, victories in Marseille or Nice would mark an
unprecedented breakthrough.
Nice, one
of the country’s most conservative large cities, will perhaps be the most
telling battleground, with incumbent Mayor Christian Estrosi from President
Emmanuel Macron’s centrist alliance facing off against Eric Ciotti, the former
head of the Republicans who broke away to align with RN. It’s a race that will
offer a preview of next year’s central problem: Will moderate conservative
voters ultimately hold the line against the far right, or drift toward it in a
presidential runoff?
The most
recent polls show Estrosi is expected to lose, which is a troubling sign for
the country’s moderates. If affluent traditionally Republican voters are
willing to accept local alliances with the RN, it’s possible that resistance to
a far-right presidency could weaken dramatically.
Finally,
Marseille presents a different but equally important test, as Socialist Mayor
Benoit Payan is facing RN candidate Franck Allisio in what looks to be a
neck-and-neck first round. Here, again, the decisive factor will be tactical
voting — whether centrists, conservatives and left-wing voters will unite
behind a moderate candidate to block the far right.
Such
alliances once formed the backbone of France’s so-called Republican Front, the
informal coalition that delivered Macron victory over far-right leader Marine
Le Pen in both 2017 and 2022. So an RN victory in Marseille would amount to a
political earthquake — not only because of the city’s size but because it would
suggest this defensive alliance is collapsing.
Paris, by
contrast, may offer fewer national clues. The capital remains resistant to the
far right, though nationalist voters there are increasingly favoring firebrand
Éric Zemmour’s Reconquest movement over the RN. And the main contest is pitting
Socialist Deputy Mayor Emmanuel Gregoire against center-right Culture Minister
Rachida Dati, reflecting intra-mainstream competition rather than ideological
realignment.
In short,
the deeper story lies beyond the headline cities.
France’s
traditional governing parties — the Socialists on the center left and the
Republicans on the center right — remain entrenched in local governments
despite their ongoing near-collapse at the national level since 2017. Unusually
low turnout during 2020’s pandemic-disrupted municipal elections helped
preserve this local dominance as well.
But poor
results in the coming weeks could finally shatter hopes of a revival. Even
Jean-Luc Mélenchon’s hard-left French Unbowed is campaigning aggressively, less
with the goal of winning town halls and more to weaken Socialist rivals and
ensure there’s no moderate left figure capable of challenging him in the
presidential race.
Meanwhile,
the RN is running candidates in more municipal races than ever before. Even
without capturing major cities, incremental gains across smaller towns —
particularly in the country’s south and northwest — would deepen its governing
experience and normalize its presence at the local level.
Ultimately,
these elections will hinge on second-round voting patterns. For decades, French
democracy has relied on the willingness of voters to unite across ideological
divides to block extremist outcomes. Whether that instinct remains in 2027 is
perhaps the defining question of next year’s race.
And while
the municipal results won’t decide France’s presidency, they may tell us
something more important: if the coalition that once kept the far right from
power is merely weakened, or already gone.


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