Ten days before the first round of the 2026 municipal elections, Bruno Retailleau, president of Les Républicains, denounced from Le Blanc-Mesnil the agreements between La France Insoumise and other left-wing parties in 122 municipalities. He calls these deals 'accords de la honte.' The Socialist Party sees this as a diversion from local alliances between the right and the far right.
Bruno Retailleau, president of the Les Républicains (LR) party since 2023, reaffirmed his attachment to the traditional right-left divide during a speech delivered on Thursday, March 5, 2026, in Le Blanc-Mesnil, Seine-Saint-Denis. Ahead of the first round of the municipal elections, he staged this opposition to denounce what he calls the 'accords de la honte' between La France Insoumise (LFI) and other left-wing formations.
According to calculations provided by LR, these agreements affect 122 municipalities where LFI aligns in the first round with at least one of the three main left-wing parties: the Socialists, the Greens, or the Communists. In 44 towns, the deals even involve all four formations. Examples cited include prefectures such as Chartres, Beauvais, and Niort. The party distributed a press kit including a QR code linking to the list of affected municipalities, based on its own classification.
From the Socialist Party's perspective, this attack is seen as an attempt to divert attention from local alliances between LR and the 'Macronists' (Renaissance, Horizons, MoDem), or between the right and the far right. Retailleau, former interior minister, theorizes a return to the political landscape before Emmanuel Macron's arrival, emphasizing: 'I believe in the return of the right-left divide.'
This intervention occurs amid the 2026 municipal elections, where political forces clash over local issues with varied alliance strategies.