Paris's 2026 municipal elections set to be unprecedented

Paris's municipal elections, scheduled for March 15 and 22, 2026, introduce a new voting system that breaks with tradition. Adopted in 2025 at the urging of Rachida Dati, the reform allows voters to cast separate ballots for their arrondissement and the central city hall. This change, amid the capital's other peculiarities, opens unexpected prospects in the race for City Hall.

Parisian municipal elections have long been marked by peculiarities. Established less than fifty years ago, in 1977, they make the mayor responsible for both a city and a department, with powers intertwined with those of the region for transport and the state for security. Among the roughly 35,000 ballots held simultaneously across France, Paris's stands out particularly for the 2026 vote.

The main innovation lies in the voting method, reformed in 2025 through an amendment to the 1982 law applying to Paris, Lyon, and Marseille. Thanks to intense lobbying by Rachida Dati, the Republicans mayor of the 7th arrondissement, lawmakers adopted this change to ease her potential rise to the central city hall. Previously, voters elected arrondissement councilors who then chose the mayor. Now, they will vote twice: once for their arrondissement and once for City Hall. This marks a precedent, as in the only pre-reform election in 1977, arrondissement town halls did not exist.

This separation breaks the interdependence between local baronies and the central mayor's office. For instance, in the 15th arrondissement, Philippe Goujon (LR), the dean of the Paris Council, has ruled since 2008 over a territory more populous than Le Havre. In the past, central mayor candidates had to court these local officials for support; now, that dynamic is severed, making the election more open and unpredictable.

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Vibrant scene of France's 2026 municipal election campaign launch in a town square, featuring candidate posters and enthusiastic crowds.
صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

France's 2026 municipal election campaign opens with over 50 000 candidate lists

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

The official campaign for France's 2026 municipal elections began on March 2, featuring over 50 000 lists and 900 000 candidates across 34 944 communes. Despite parity mandated by a 2025 law, more than three-quarters of the lists are led by men. The votes are scheduled for March 15 and 22.

Less than a week before the first round of municipal elections on March 15, 2026, recent polls show tight voting intentions in major cities. Le Figaro provides an infographic on trends in Paris, Marseille, Lyon, and other areas. Races are especially competitive in metropolises, making first-round wins unlikely.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

Amid a national retreat from ecological ambitions, emblematic environmental measures are becoming more consensual at the municipal level. In Paris, Les Républicains candidate Rachida Dati includes green proposals in her program for the March 15 and 22, 2026 elections. Yet, some issues remain contentious.

List deposits closed Tuesday evening, setting lineups for the municipal elections second round on March 22. Numerous alliances, technical fusions, and withdrawals—especially on the left between LFI and PS—have simplified duels and triangulaires. Nearly 124,097 candidates compete in 1526 communes.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

In Nanterre, a left-wing stronghold since 1935, four left-wing lists will compete in the first round of municipal elections on March 15. Socialists have refused to join the outgoing majority backed by communists and ecologists, marking an unprecedented split. This division comes amid a succession following the departure of former mayor Patrick Jarry.

One week before the first round of Paris municipals on March 15, Jean-Luc Mélenchon supported LFI candidate Sophia Chikirou at her final rally, targeting socialist rival Emmanuel Grégoire. Right-wing candidate Rachida Dati urges voters not to split their votes to enable change. Centrist Pierre-Yves Bournazel persists with his independent run amid tensions.

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