Martine Vassal embraces 'work, family, homeland' slogan in Marseille debate

During a televised debate on Marseille's municipal elections, right-wing candidate Martine Vassal adopted and defended the slogan 'work, family, homeland', linked to the Vichy regime, before adding 'humanity'. The moment halted discussions among key candidates, which focused on national controversies.

The debate, hosted by BFM-TV in partnership with La Provence and Le Figaro, took place on Thursday, February 19, in the grand hall of the Palais de la Bourse, near Marseille's Vieux-Port. The four main candidates – Benoît Payan (divers gauche, incumbent mayor), Martine Vassal (divers droite), Sébastien Delogu (La France insoumise), and Franck Allisio (Rassemblement national) – had been discussing national issues for over an hour, including the death of Quentin Deranque in Lyon, alleged ties between the antifascist group La Jeune Garde and LFI, and the fight against narcotrafficking.

Questioned about a potential second-round alliance with the RN, Martine Vassal, president of the Aix-Marseille-Provence Metropolis and the Bouches-du-Rhône department, and backed by a right-center union including Renaissance, stated her personal values had « never changed »: « It’s merit, work, family, homeland. »

The remark prompted an instant response. Benoît Payan interjected: « Do you realize what you just said? Work, family, homeland – that’s Mr. Pétain’s slogan. » Martine Vassal replied defiantly: « Yes, of course. And it’s my slogan and my values! » Prompted by journalist Apolline de Malherbe, she added: « And humanity. »

The moment froze the audience, highlighting a shift in a debate otherwise focused on issues distant from Marseille residents' daily concerns.

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Split-scene photo illustration of tensions in Benoît Payan's left-wing camp and Franck Allisio's controversial RN proposals in Marseille elections.
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Internal tensions in Payan's camp and controversial proposals by Allisio in Marseille

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In Marseille, the submission of electoral lists by outgoing mayor Benoît Payan has sparked tensions within his left-wing majority, with sidelined deputies denouncing brutal decisions. Meanwhile, RN candidate Franck Allisio, polling at 34% of voting intentions, presented priority measures including an 'anti-thugs pass' for parks and beaches. These developments come two weeks before the first round of the 2026 municipal elections.

During a televised debate on BFMTV Thursday evening, candidate Martine Vassal claimed values including «work, family, homeland», the Vichy regime's slogan, prompting Benoît Payan's reaction calling it Pétain's motto. The outgoing mayor also stated he would withdraw from the race if he trailed Sébastien Delogu in the first round to block the RN. One month before the municipal elections, a poll places Payan ahead with 31% of voting intentions.

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In Marseille, tensions are rising between incumbent mayor Benoît Payan and La France insoumise candidate Sébastien Delogu ahead of the 2026 municipal elections. Delogu accuses Payan of pursuing a Macronist policy, while Payan blames his rival for choosing division. Meanwhile, Marine Le Pen is supporting RN candidate Franck Allisio, heightening the far-right threat.

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Three weeks before Paris municipal elections, socialist candidate Emmanuel Grégoire held an unprecedented exchange with residents, lacking a debate with main rival Rachida Dati. The event took place on Sunday at Place de la Bataille-de-Stalingrad in the 19th arrondissement.

Valérie Pécresse, the Republicans' 2022 presidential candidate, firmly opposes any union with the National Rally in an op-ed published on December 14. She urges her party not to sell out and to refocus on its values to revive France. This stance comes as some within the Republicans consider such an alliance.

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