French
Far Right Falls Short of Statement Win in Yardstick Local Races
France’s
far right hoped for major gains in Sunday’s municipal elections, a key
bellwether moment before a presidential election next year. Its results were
mixed.
Mark
Landler Catherine
Porter
By Mark
Landler and Catherine Porter
Reporting
from Paris
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/22/world/europe/france-mayor-elections.html
Published
March 22, 2026
Updated
March 23, 2026, 5:08 a.m. ET
For
months, the far right in France has been viewed almost as a national
government-in-waiting, its leaders holding wide polling advantages against
their rivals a year before presidential elections. Yet on Sunday, in mayoral
elections across the country, French voters delivered a more mixed verdict.
Far-right
candidates lost in the major places in the south they had hoped to win —
including Marseille, France’s second-largest city, which the far-right National
Rally had identified as a ripe target to showcase its ascent. Their losses were
balanced by far-right victories in two other southern cities, Carcassonne and
Nice.
As the
results trickled in on Sunday evening from a second round of voting, the
election ended up being less a far-right wave than a complex portrait of the
fragmented state of French politics. With a grab bag of results — some of which
favored the mainstream parties, others the hard left or hard right — leaders of
every political stripe went before TV cameras to try to claim victory.
Yet
turnout was the lowest in two decades, except for 2020, when the pandemic kept
voters away. That suggested a disenchanted electorate — one that is open to
populist appeals and insurgent candidates.
While the
election may not have produced the sort of victories that would have
electrified the far right and alarmed its opponents, it still left the National
Rally as a force to be reckoned with 13 months before the presidential vote.
The party
held on to its traditional strongholds along the Mediterranean coast and in the
north of France and won a significant number of small cities in the far north
and far south. But that would not be enough to triumph in a presidential
election, said Jean-Yves Camus, an expert on the far right at the Jean Jaurès
Foundation, a left-leaning think tank based in Paris.
“If it
wants to win 2027, it really needs to enlarge its fan base to other provinces
of the country,” Mr. Camus said. “It’s a party that has a problem in the big
cities,” he said. In Paris, for example, the National Rally’s candidate eked
out just 1.6 percent of the vote in the first round a week ago.
Marine Le
Pen, a fixture of far-right politics in France, and her protégé, Jordan
Bardella, the party’s 30-year-old president, have topped most polls for the
presidency for nearly a year. If Ms. Le Pen is barred from running by her
conviction on embezzling charges, which she is appealing, Mr. Bardella is
likely to run in her stead.
At one
level, the election of more than 34,000 mayors was a quintessentially local
exercise. Parochial issues, like trash collection, figure high on the list of
voter concerns. Yet the elections are also a bellwether for the political winds
in France, which have blown against centrist parties in recent years.
A
far-left party, France Unbowed, claimed early momentum by scoring a victory in
the industrial town of Roubaix. But the party’s gains were limited elsewhere,
notably in Toulouse, where it had allied in the runoff with a center-left
candidate, who was projected to lose.
And the
long-suffering center left managed to rally in two big cities. In Marseille,
Benoît Payan, running in a coalition of left-wing parties, comfortably turned
back a challenge by the National Rally’s candidate, Franck Allisio, who had
almost matched Mr. Payan’s vote tally in the first round.
In Paris,
Emmanuel Grégoire, the candidate of the center-left Socialist Party, won his
runoff against a conservative, Rachida Dati. Ms. Dati had amassed support from
a far-right candidate who dropped out after the first round. Mr. Grégoire is a
former deputy to the departing mayor, Anne Hidalgo, and his victory kept Paris,
which has elected Socialist mayors for 25 years, in the hands of the left.
Mr.
Grégoire said Parisians had sent a message to the National Rally: “Paris is
not, and never will be, a city of the extreme right.” Mr. Grégoire celebrated
his victory by riding his bicycle to City Hall.
Analysts
cautioned against over-interpreting what the mayoral results reveal about the
likely outcome of the presidential election. Yet they are a useful gauge of the
relative strength of the parties, and as an indicator of the terrain that
politicians plan to stake out once the national campaign gathers momentum.
The
elections were also fateful for two political heavyweights who still harbor
ambitions for higher office. Édouard Philippe, who served as prime minister
under President Emmanuel Macron from 2017 to 2020, was re-elected mayor of Le
Havre, bolstering his candidacy for president. François Bayrou, whose 10 months
as prime minister ended in a no-confidence vote last September, was ousted as
mayor of Pau, in southwestern France, raising questions about his political
future.
Ms. Le
Pen and Mr. Bardella tried to put a good face on the results, saying that the
National Rally would now control city halls in dozens of towns across France.
“The National Rally and its candidates are achieving the biggest breakthrough
in the party’s history,” Mr. Bardella said on Sunday evening.
Ms. Le
Pen said the results vindicated the party’s “strategy of establishing a local
presence.” But its failure to pick up any major cities — it was a far-right
candidate from another party who won in Nice — was difficult to paper over.
“These
are the jewels the National Rally hoped to have in its crown,” said Vincent
Martigny, a professor of political science at Côte d’Azur University in Nice.
“It was not crowned tonight.”
Still,
Professor Martigny argued, “the main loser was France Unbowed,” the far-left
party. He noted that in cities where center-left candidates allied with the far
left, those candidates often went on to lose. But in Paris and Marseille, where
center-left candidates rejected those alliances, they were victorious.
The
message, Professor Martigny said, was that for all the talk of the polarization
of French politics, many voters, at least on the local level, are not ready to
hand over their municipal governments to parties viewed as extreme. “They don’t
want that,” he said. “So, they are ready to vote for anybody else.”
Ana
Castelain and Daphné Anglès 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.
Catherine
Porter is an international reporter for The Times, covering France. She is
based in Paris.


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