Rachida
Dati aims to end Paris’ 25-year run of left-wing mayors
A
disciple of ex-President Nicolas Sarkozy, she has a reputation as a tough
operator but will probably have to persuade one of her rivals on the right to
step down.
March 10,
2026 4:00 am CET
By Victor
Goury-Laffont
https://www.politico.eu/article/rachida-dati-aims-to-end-paris-25-year-run-of-left-wing-mayors/
PARIS —
If Rachida Dati realizes her long-held dream of becoming Paris mayor in the
coming days, her victory will represent the culmination of a remarkable journey
from her childhood in an impoverished social housing complex to the gilded
chambers of City Hall.
The
pugnacious former culture minister from the conservative Les Républicains party
is running neck-and-neck with the Socialist Emmanuel Grégoire in polls running
up to municipal elections on March 15 and 22.
A
disciple of former right-wing President Nicolas Sarkozy — and sharing his
reputation for acerbic, combative politics — she has campaigned by appealing to
voters seeking to pull Paris away from 25 years of left-wing leadership. She
has vowed to hire more local police and arm them with guns, end current Mayor
Anne Hidalgo’s efforts to get cars out of the city and involve the private
sector more in fixing the housing crunch.
“My plan
to change Paris is like a boxing match: It takes a lot of commitment, you get
hit, and you need perseverance to win,” she said on social media, alongside a
video of her visiting a martial arts studio full of sparring fighters.
A victory
for Dati in the mayoral race would hand her battered party a symbolic boost
ahead of next year’s presidential election, in which the far-right National
Rally of Marine Le Pen is currently tipped to triumph.
But the
race is going to be close. Five candidates are now expected to progress from
the first round on Sunday, making the electoral arithmetic complex. Including
Dati, there looks likely to be a trio of candidates from the center right, the
conservatives and the far right in the runoff, which risks splitting the vote
and gifting victory to Grégoire on the left.
To win
decisively, Dati must convince at least one of her opponents on the right that
she is the only consensus candidate who can beat Grégoire, and that they should
drop out.
The
problem? Dati isn’t known in France as a consensus-builder, and her attack-dog
instincts once led her to threaten to turn the prime minister’s puppy into a
kebab. The 60-year-old is known as a
frequent target of gossip magazines due to the intrigue over the paternity of
her first child and over her glitzy tastes — an anti-corruption probe into her
alleged failure to declare a €420,000 jewelry collection is underway. She
denies any wrongdoing.
Dati’s
backers say this image is a caricature and that her campaign is successfully
hitting home in less affluent parts of the capital — partly thanks to her own
rags-to-riches story. Her father was a construction worker of Moroccan origin.
One
government minister who is bucking his own party’s candidate to support Dati
said her ability to communicate in a direct, forceful manner is “extraordinary”
and “allows her to transcend traditional political divides.”
Geoffroy
Boulard, the incumbent conservative mayor of Paris’ upscale 17th
arrondissement, praised Dati as a “highly recognizable candidate who, through
her personality and political background, is making our message heard in less
well-off districts where we didn’t perform the last two times.”
Tough
math
The
passage to the second round, however, puts Dati in a tough spot.
If
current polls hold steady, five candidates will net 10 percent of the vote and
make the runoff. That would set up a slugfest featuring Dati, Grégoire,
Pierre-Yves Bournazel from the center-right party Horizons, Sophia Chikirou of
the hard-left France Unbowed and Sarah Knafo, a far-right member of the
European Parliament.
Dati is
expected to outperform Bournazel and Knafo in the first round and wants at
least one of them to bow out and back her in the runoff.
“With all
due respect for other candidates, this is an election between Dati and
Grégoire,” said centrist MEP Sandro Gozi, who is running alongside Dati to be a
city councilor.
Teaming
up with a firebrand like Knafo could alienate other centrists and Dati
supporters, so convincing Bournazel to step back is the safer bet.
Knafo
said in an interview with Le Figaro Sunday that she would be opening to joining
forces.
Bournazel,
however, said late last month that he wouldn’t leave the race to swing it in
favor of Dati — whom he accuses of “brutalizing” the public debate through her
polarizing style — or Grégoire.
But
Bournazel’s candidacy has struggled to get off the ground and to marshal
support from the centrist camp, which includes President Emmanuel Macron’s
party Renaissance. Though Renaissance nominally backs Bournazel, Macron himself
has stayed out of the public fray.
Three
officials close to Macron, who like others in this story were granted anonymity
to speak candidly, suggested that Dati enjoys the president’s support.
One of
the trio said last week that Macron views Dati as a “remarkable person” who
“gets things done.” Dati herself said in late February that she is “the
candidate for mayor of Paris supported by Emmanuel Macron.”
The head
of Bournazel’s party, former Prime Minister Édouard Philippe, spoke with Dati
on the phone about the contest last month, according to two elected officials
backing Dati’s campaign and a friend of Philippe’s.
The
individual close to Philippe — a former conservative who is a presidential
candidate next year — cautioned reading too much into the call. One of the
individuals working for Dati, however, is convinced Philippe “will never take
the risk of letting the left win” by letting Bournazel siphon off potential
Dati voters in the second round.
Path to
victory
Dati has
a path to victory, albeit a narrower one, even if neither Bournazel nor Knafo
drop out.
She is
campaigning on a made-for-politics life story that sounds like a French version
of the American dream, in which robust social safety nets such as free
university and public housing helped catapult her to stardom from a mid-sized
city in Burgundy, where she grew up sharing her room with several of her 10
siblings.
Her
candidacy has been relatively undisturbed by her upcoming trial on charges of
illicit lobbying as an MEP and as well as the undeclared jewelry allegations.
(She denies wrongdoing in both cases.)
She also
enjoys strong name recognition thanks to her tenure as justice minister and,
more recently, as culture minister.
Accepting
the role two years ago required a political transformation from fierce critic
of President Emmanuel Macron to vociferous ally. But that was a small price to
pay for the media exposure that followed.
As
culture minister, Dati was front and center at some of France’s most iconic
events, including a second-row seat at the reopening of the Notre-Dame
Cathedral.
Dati was
a mainstay at the glitzy Cannes film festival, photographed hand-in-hand with
Hollywood royalty such as Kevin Costner.
And
during Macron’s state visit to the United Kingdom over the summer, she rubbed
shoulders with actual royalty, joining Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu for a
carriage ride with Prince William and Princess Kate.
Dati’s
critics allege she sacrificed her principles to join Macron’s cabinet in 2024
with an eye on boosting her profile and securing the French leader’s support
for her candidacy early on. The audio of a group call between her and a group
call with conservative Paris city councilors obtained by France’s public
broadcaster suggested the contours of a deal with Macron’s camp were in place.
Although
Dati batted down those accusations, she has developed a reputation for being
ruthlessly strategic. She reportedly kicked up a fuss within Les Républicains
last year over a Parisian by-election in order to leverage the conservative
party into supporting her mayoral bid.
That
notoriety is a problem for a candidate trying to sell herself as a unifier
treating the moment with humility.
So, on
the stump, Dati has tried to frame her ambition as that of a passionate civil
servant — even invoking a conversation she had with her mentor Simone Veil, the
famed Holocaust survivor who led the charge in France to decriminalize
abortion, about the dangers of “getting drunk on power.”
Yet Dati
also calls Paris “the fight of my life,” so few expect her to pull punches.
Victory,
in that case, will depend on delivering a convincing message about who she is
actually fighting for.


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