Municipal elections in Romans-sur-Isère overshadowed by Crépol incident

The 2026 municipal election campaign in Romans-sur-Isère, a town of 33,000 residents, unfolds in a heavy atmosphere. Three years after the murder of a teenager at a country ball in Crépol in 2023, fears and resentments linger. Outgoing mayor Marie-Hélène Thoraval struggles to ease these tensions, amplified by a national narrative of ethnic confrontation.

The village of Crépol in the Drôme department remains scarred by the murder of Thomas Perotto, a teenager stabbed on November 19, 2023, during a country ball. This event has solidified tensions between surrounding rural areas and the working-class neighborhoods of Romans-sur-Isère, located 20 kilometers to the south. Some Crépol residents, like Emilie, a 40-year-old former police officer, now carry a switchblade in their bag and avoid the town, particularly the La Monnaie district, from which some suspects under investigation originate.

Emilie, a mother who has voted far-right for eighteen years, says she once brought her category 1 Labrador to work for protection. Her husband, Julien, a building worker, voices intense anger: “If it had been me, I would have planted a bomb to blow it all up there. So what if there are 99% good and 1% bad.” By “there,” he means the urban areas seen as risky.

Another local, Christophe, a 43-year-old mason, tries to contextualize the incident: “Words came out wrong, the rugby players got scared, and it all went to hell.” Yet, the narrative pitting “Whites” against “Arabs” has taken hold in national media and politics, also shaping local discourse.

Marie-Hélène Thoraval, mayor of Romans-sur-Isère since 2014 and seeking re-election from the right, confronts this lingering shadow. Elected amid divisions, she has not managed to dispel the fears, making the electoral campaign especially burdensome in this Drôme town.

Related Articles

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

Internal tensions in Payan's camp and controversial proposals by Allisio in Marseille

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

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.

In Clermont-Ferrand, a historic left-wing stronghold, insecurity tied to narcotraffic is dominating the 2026 municipal election campaign. Socialist mayor Olivier Bianchi, seeking a third term, faces criticism from the right and far-right, which are uniting their efforts. Violent events in 2025 have heightened this central debate.

Reported by AI

At 80 years old, Laurent Cathala, the socialist mayor of Créteil for 49 years, is launching his ninth municipal campaign despite a previous promise not to run again. He aims to block La France insoumise and complete urban development projects. His alliance is limited to the Parti communiste, as the Ecologists declined the invitation.

In the Somme department, once dotted with communist strongholds, PCF-affiliated mayors are now few and far between amid economic decline and the rise of the Rassemblement national. In Woincourt, Mayor Arnaud Petit laments the nighttime posting of an RN poster, a sign of mounting pressure on left-wing bastions. Aging militants and a lack of successors make political survival precarious ahead of the 2026 elections.

Reported by AI

One month before the Paris municipal elections on March 15 and 22, 2026, the six main candidates struggle to focus on local issues, overshadowed by national debates and controversies. Budget disputes, school scandals, and judicial affairs dominate the campaign, hindering constructive dynamics.

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.

Reported by AI

Following Jean-Luc Mélenchon's controversial 'grand remplacement' reference in Villeurbanne, several La France insoumise (LFI) cadres have made skin color a criterion for selecting candidates in the 2026 municipal elections, fueling accusations of racialism within the party.

 

 

 

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline