Lyon mayoral candidates Grégory Doucet and Anaïs Belouassa Cherifi during a televised debate, as Doucet signals openness to alliance.
Lyon mayoral candidates Grégory Doucet and Anaïs Belouassa Cherifi during a televised debate, as Doucet signals openness to alliance.
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Grégory Doucet open to alliance with LFI in second round of Lyon municipal elections

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In a televised debate on February 24, 2026, Lyon's ecologist mayor Grégory Doucet said he was open to allying with LFI candidate Anaïs Belouassa Cherifi in the second round of the municipal elections, with conditions. The debate, featuring the main candidates, focused on the death of militant Quentin Deranque and security issues. Poll favorite Jean-Michel Aulas faced attacks on his record and political backing.

On February 24, 2026, less than three weeks before the first round of Lyon's municipal elections on March 15 and 22, the four main candidates clashed in a debate organized by BFMTV in partnership with Le Figaro. Incumbent ecologist mayor Grégory Doucet, Jean-Michel Aulas backed by the right and center (43% voting intentions per an Elabe poll), Anaïs Belouassa Cherifi (LFI, 10%), and Alexandre Dupalais (UDR-RN, 6%) discussed security, alliances, and the death of Quentin Deranque, a 23-year-old far-right militant beaten to death on February 12 in Lyon.

Doucet called the incident 'shocking' and opened the door to an alliance with Belouassa Cherifi in the second round, 'but with certain conditions,' particularly that no one in her team be 'involved in violence.' He added: 'On the evening of the first round, the people of Lyon will have sent us a message,' and it would be 'our responsibility' to hear it. Belouassa Cherifi replied that her priority is to prevent Aulas from becoming mayor: 'I will do everything in my power to ensure that does not happen.'

Deranque's death, linked to suspects from the antifascist Jeune Garde (founded in 2018 by LFI deputy Raphaël Arnault and dissolved in June 2025), dominated the discussion. Belouassa Cherifi condemned violence while calling herself an 'antifascist militant.' The government has asked the courts to investigate a possible reconstitution of the group, and Emmanuel Macron requested dissolution proceedings against its local offshoots. A tribute march for Deranque drew 3,200 people the previous Saturday, marred by Nazi salutes.

On security, Aulas proposes bolstering video surveillance, criticizing the lack of cameras in some districts. Doucet defends his record, noting the low delinquency rate in the 4th arrondissement, and announces 50 anti-incivility agents. Dupalais wants 5,000 cameras and 30 neighborhood police officers, while Belouassa Cherifi favors proximity policing without firearms.

Aulas, a 76-year-old political novice, presented himself as a civil society candidate but was called an 'empty shell' by Belouassa Cherifi and 'out of touch' by Doucet. Dupalais attacked his LR and Macron backing, which Aulas defends as relevant on many issues.

Ano ang sinasabi ng mga tao

X discussions criticize Grégory Doucet's openness to a conditional alliance with LFI's Anaïs Belouassa Cherifi in Lyon's municipal election second round, portraying it as a desperate bid to block frontrunner Jean-Michel Aulas. Right-leaning users and political figures express disapproval and skepticism, suggesting it strengthens Aulas. Media posts neutrally relay the debate statements.

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Police arresting nine ultraleft suspects, including an LFI aide, outside Sciences Po Lyon after nationalist militant Quentin Deranque's fatal assault.
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Nine suspects arrested in probe into Quentin Deranque's death in Lyon

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Quentin Deranque, a 23-year-old nationalist militant, died on Saturday February 14, 2026, following an assault on Thursday evening in Lyon, on the sidelines of a conference by LFI MEP Rima Hassan at Sciences Po. Nine suspects, including parliamentary aide Jacques-Élie Favrot to LFI deputy Raphaël Arnault, were arrested on Tuesday, most being former members of the ultraleft group Jeune Garde, dissolved in 2025.

In Lyon, deputies and senators are actively intervening in the March 2026 mayoral race, blurring lines between national mandates and local campaigning. Left-wing lawmakers are rallying to counter candidate Jean-Michel Aulas and bolster outgoing mayor Grégory Doucet's tarnished image. On the right, Senator Étienne Blanc is stirring discord.

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La France insoumise deputy Abdelkader Lahmar, 54, has officially announced his candidacy for the 2026 municipal elections in Vaulx-en-Velin, in the Lyon metropolis. Joined by Jean-Luc Mélenchon, he is forming an alliance with communists, ecologists, and former Mélenchon supporters to challenge outgoing Socialist mayor Hélène Geoffroy.

Pierre-Yves Bournazel, Horizons and Renaissance candidate for Paris mayor, reaffirmed on February 25 that he will not join Emmanuel Grégoire or Rachida Dati in the second round of the municipal elections. Supported by Edouard Philippe and Gabriel Attal, he is campaigning to win, despite a poll crediting him with 12% of votes in the first round. He criticizes the other candidates' projects and denounces a brutalization of political life.

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Following the death of a far-right militant in Lyon on February 14, 2026, Jean-Luc Mélenchon, leader of La France insoumise, intensifies his populist strategy by positioning himself as the spearhead of an 'antifascist arc' against the Rassemblement national ahead of 2027. His recent statements in Lyon, deemed antisemitic by some, widen the rift with the rest of the left, while the far right calls for a front against him.

Périgueux's outgoing socialist mayor, Emeric Lavitola, is running for a second term in the March 15, 2026, municipal elections, backed by a broad coalition of left-wing parties. He faces a divided right, with two former allies competing for centrist and right-wing votes, while the National Rally struggles to complete its list.

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Following the death of far-right militant Quentin Deranque in Lyon on February 14, Republicans are calling for a political isolation of La France insoumise (LFI), accused of fostering violence. LFI leaders deny any responsibility and remain open to left-wing alliances for the 2026 municipal elections. The Socialist Party is hesitant on these proposals due to the alleged involvement of an LFI deputy's staff in the case.

 

 

 

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