The
poisoned succession battle to rule Paris
Socialist
front-runner Emmanuel Grégoire says his former boss, Mayor Anne Hidaglo, “did
everything she could to torpedo my candidacy.”
March 12,
2026 4:01 am CET
By Clea
Caulcutt
https://www.politico.eu/article/paris-mayor-election-emmanuel-gregoire-anne-hidalgo/
PARIS —
Emmanuel Grégoire should have had an easy campaign to succeed his former boss,
Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo.
But the
pair’s very public political breakup is creating a major obstacle for the
Socialist front-runner in the lead-up to the race to lead the French capital,
which begins on Sunday.
Since
their clash, Grégoire has conspicuously distanced himself from Hidalgo, and
that has meant losing the opportunity to win votes by boasting about the
successful Paris Olympics or the transformation of the banks of the Seine into
a popular pedestrian area with cafés and restaurants.
If
Grégoire fails to extend the Socialists’ quarter-century rule of Paris, it
would be a disaster for his party and further evidence of its weakness before
the country’s presidential election next year.
“She did
everything she could to torpedo my candidacy. I’m not her candidate and I am
not her heir,” Grégoire said in a February interview with franceinfo. That’s a
spectacular rupture for the man who was her principal deputy from 2018 to 2024.
The race
is going to be close, giving the right its best opportunity in years to take
control of the City of Lights — if it can unite around one candidate.
Grégoire
and conservative former Culture Minister Rachida Dati are running neck-and-neck
for the top spot in the polls. But an unprecedented five candidates could make
the runoff on March 22, which would trigger a mad scramble for alliances.
A bungled
succession
So what
happened between Hidalgo, the chief architect of the French capital’s green
revolution, and Grégoire, her once-presumed heir?
Over the
summer, Hidalgo spurned his candidacy to support a lesser-known senator to
succeed her as mayor.
Grégoire
still wound up winning the Socialist Party’s nomination, but the damage was
done after Hidalgo publicly claimed that “the left would lose” Paris if her
former deputy was its candidate.
Three
people familiar with their relationship, all granted anonymity to speak
candidly, said things started to turn sour after Hidalgo’s failed 2022
presidential bid, in which she won a dismal 1.75 percent of the vote.
With
Hidalgo’s fortunes waning and Grégoire seemingly tapped as her replacement,
things started to get “complicated,” an official in the Socialist Party
said.
“She has
an authoritarian streak and was really hard on him,” the official said.
This is a
trait that has widely been remarked upon, and it earned her the nickname
“Queen-Mayor.” It helped with short-term implementation of projects but now
looks like it could have undermined her party in the long run, given some of
the bad blood it has fomented.
“You need
toughness to succeed in Paris and transform the city,” said Gaspard Gantzer, a
former Paris City Hall advisor. “Her style was a bit brutal, a bit cutting with
others.”
Hidalgo
was then furious when Grégoire ran for and won a parliamentary seat
representing Paris during the 2024 election, according to two of the three
people familiar with the relationship.
One of
Hidalgo’s allies said “they were both at fault,” as Grégoire became less
supportive of her political ambitions and started pursuing his own agenda after
the last presidential race.
“It was a
classic leader versus heir situation,” the Hidalgo supporter said.
‘A
different mayor’
Asked
about the feud by POLITICO when unveiling his platform to reporters last month,
Grégoire said he has fond memories of working with Hidalgo but stressed he
would be “a different mayor” who would address “the new expectations” of Paris
residents.
Grégoire
has instead tried to take a page out of Zoran Mamdani’s New York playbook,
focusing his message on housing shortages and bringing down the cost of living.
He’s also promised to “break with [Hidalgo’s] method.”
While
Grégoire hasn’t exactly broken through in the polls, the strategy could reap
benefits given the Europe-wide anti-green backlash and Hidalgo’s reputation
among resident of the capital.
A poll
from Ipsos published in December found that Hidalgo leaves office with a legacy
that splits Parisians, even if they have come to love biking to work or
enjoying more open space.
The pace
of change and Hidalgo’s disregard for her critics has made her divisive, even
losing some support among those proud of the Olympics and Paris becoming a
global showcase for urban transformation. Hidalgo’s missteps added to the
resentment, whether that focused on ill-designed bike lanes, several abandoned
urban forests or the endless redevelopment of the Eiffel Tower gardens.
“She
would make a huge announcement and then wait for her teams to comply,” said
Paris urban policy expert Stephane Kirkland, who has worked for firms involved
in Paris city projects. “It was a my-way-or-the-highway approach.”
Kirkland
said that Grégoire’s campaign has clearly “internalized the new dynamic”
against green issues and exasperation with Hidalgo.
Grégoire
“isn’t talking about anything green, even if his coalition includes green
parties. He is really focused on social issues, security and cleanliness,”
Kirkland said.
Dati, the
conservative challenger, has tried to seize on public dissatisfaction with City
Hall by linking Grégoire to Hidalgo and accusing the duo of turning Paris into
a dirty, disorganized, never-ending construction site.
There are
limits to that strategy, though. Not even Dati wants to reverse course on
pedestrian zones like those on the banks of the Seine.
Aitor
Hernández-Morales contributed to this report.


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