Close Menu
Times Network New Zealand
  • Home
  • Local News
  • World
  • Business
  • Lifetyle
  • Entertainment
  • Technology
  • Travel
  • Food
  • Editor’s Choice
  • Press Release
What's On
Preliminary election results in Slovenia show tight race between Liberals and right-wing

Preliminary election results in Slovenia show tight race between Liberals and right-wing

March 23, 2026
France local elections: Paris stays left as far-right makes mixed gains

France local elections: Paris stays left as far-right makes mixed gains

March 23, 2026
Slovenia parliamentary elections: Governing liberals face right-wing conservatives

Slovenia parliamentary elections: Governing liberals face right-wing conservatives

March 23, 2026
Italy votes on high-stakes justice referendum, a key test for Meloni’s government

Italy votes on high-stakes justice referendum, a key test for Meloni’s government

March 23, 2026
Macron pushes for tougher EU digital rule enforcement ahead of key elections

Macron pushes for tougher EU digital rule enforcement ahead of key elections

March 21, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Web Stories
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Times Network New Zealand
Subscribe
  • Home
  • Local News
  • World
  • Business
  • Lifetyle
  • Entertainment
  • Technology
  • Travel
  • Food
  • Editor’s Choice
  • Press Release
Times Network New Zealand
Home » France local elections: Paris stays left as far-right makes mixed gains
World

France local elections: Paris stays left as far-right makes mixed gains

By Press RoomMarch 23, 20263 Mins Read
France local elections: Paris stays left as far-right makes mixed gains
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

France’s municipal runoff delivered a mixed verdict for the country’s main political forces on Sunday: the Left held Paris with Socialist Emmanuel Grégoire, the far-right and its allies scored a major symbolic win in Nice, and mainstream parties pointed to resilience in several big and mid-sized cities ahead of the 2027 presidential race.

ADVERTISEMENT


ADVERTISEMENT

Municipal elections in France are local contests to elect mayors and local councils, but they are closely watched because they test party organisation, alliance-building, and grassroots strength before national campaigns begin.

In the capital, Socialist Emmanuel Grégoire defeated conservative rival Rachida Dati, ensuring Paris remains under left-wing control after outgoing mayor Anne Hidalgo chose not to seek another term.

The result extends a quarter-century of left-led rule of the capital and hands to the Socialists one of the most visible prizes of the night. Grégoire presented the result as a mandate for a progressive vision of the city.

Elsewhere, the left also had reasons to celebrate. In Marseille, Socialist incumbent Benoît Payan was re-elected after the far right had hoped to seize France’s second-largest city.

While in Lyon, Green mayor Grégory Doucet held on after a hard-fought race against his conservative rival, which was reshaped by a last-minute merger with the list of hard-left party France Unbowed.

Socialists record strong showing

The Socialists also held or performed strongly in several regional cities, reinforcing the impression of a broader recovery for the traditional left.

For the far right, the picture was more complex. National Rally (RN) leader Jordan Bardella hailed what he called the party’s biggest local breakthrough, and RN kept the southwestern city of Perpignan while also winning smaller municipalities.

But the party fell short in several of the larger cities it had targeted, notably Marseille, Toulon and Nîmes. The exception was Nice, where Éric Ciotti — once a senior figure in the mainstream right and now allied with RN — won the race, giving the far right and its partners control of France’s fifth-largest city.

The elections also brought clearer signs of fragmentation on the centre-right and in President Emmanuel Macron’s camp.

Former prime minister Édouard Philippe was re-elected in Le Havre, strengthening his standing as a possible 2027 contender, while Macron’s centrist forces could point to a symbolic win in Bordeaux, where Renaissance candidate Thomas Cazenave defeated outgoing Green mayor Pierre Hurmic.

At the same time, the loss of Macron’s former PM, François Bayrou, in southwestern Pau, underlined the vulnerabilities of the broader presidential alliance.

Turnout remained a concern. According to the Interior Ministry, participation in mainland France stood at 48.1% at 5 p.m., higher than the Covid-disrupted 2020 election but still below pre-pandemic levels.

Taken together, the results do not predict who will succeed Macron in 2027. But they do sketch the political landscape from which that contest will emerge: a left that can still win major cities, a mainstream right that remains locally entrenched, a centre searching for durable footholds, and a far right that is growing but may still face limits in the country’s biggest urban battlegrounds.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Keep Reading

Preliminary election results in Slovenia show tight race between Liberals and right-wing

Preliminary election results in Slovenia show tight race between Liberals and right-wing

Slovenia parliamentary elections: Governing liberals face right-wing conservatives

Slovenia parliamentary elections: Governing liberals face right-wing conservatives

Italy votes on high-stakes justice referendum, a key test for Meloni’s government

Italy votes on high-stakes justice referendum, a key test for Meloni’s government

Macron pushes for tougher EU digital rule enforcement ahead of key elections

Macron pushes for tougher EU digital rule enforcement ahead of key elections

Curro Rodríguez: from bankruptcy to global water empire

Curro Rodríguez: from bankruptcy to global water empire

Fact check: Are Pokémon GO players unwittingly helping to train AI?

Fact check: Are Pokémon GO players unwittingly helping to train AI?

Podcast: Is Europe’s biggest political party shifting too far to the right?

Podcast: Is Europe’s biggest political party shifting too far to the right?

After a year of Trump’s cuts to foreign aid, has humanitarian funding suffered?

After a year of Trump’s cuts to foreign aid, has humanitarian funding suffered?

‘Nobody can blackmail us’: Leaders excoriate Orbán’s veto as he tests EU limits

‘Nobody can blackmail us’: Leaders excoriate Orbán’s veto as he tests EU limits

Editors Picks
France local elections: Paris stays left as far-right makes mixed gains

France local elections: Paris stays left as far-right makes mixed gains

March 23, 2026
Slovenia parliamentary elections: Governing liberals face right-wing conservatives

Slovenia parliamentary elections: Governing liberals face right-wing conservatives

March 23, 2026
Italy votes on high-stakes justice referendum, a key test for Meloni’s government

Italy votes on high-stakes justice referendum, a key test for Meloni’s government

March 23, 2026
Macron pushes for tougher EU digital rule enforcement ahead of key elections

Macron pushes for tougher EU digital rule enforcement ahead of key elections

March 21, 2026
Latest News
Preliminary election results in Slovenia show tight race between Liberals and right-wing

Preliminary election results in Slovenia show tight race between Liberals and right-wing

March 23, 2026
France local elections: Paris stays left as far-right makes mixed gains

France local elections: Paris stays left as far-right makes mixed gains

March 23, 2026
Slovenia parliamentary elections: Governing liberals face right-wing conservatives

Slovenia parliamentary elections: Governing liberals face right-wing conservatives

March 23, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest TikTok Instagram
© 2026 Times Network New Zealand. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.