National Rally wins 36 town halls in 2026 municipal runoff

In the second round of the 2026 municipal elections on March 22, the National Rally (RN) and its allies captured 36 towns, adding to 18 won in the first round. Key victories include Nice, Orange, and Montargis, per initial Interior Ministry results.

The 2026 municipal elections aimed for the RN to convert national momentum into local strongholds ahead of 2027. According to estimates from March 22, the party led by Jordan Bardella qualified 214 lists for the runoff in towns over 3,500 residents, plus alliances with Éric Ciotti's UDR and others. A total of 36 town halls flipped that day, bringing the tally to 54. First-round winners include David Rachline in Fréjus, Louis Aliot in Perpignan, Steeve Briois in Hénin-Beaumont, and Frédérique Joint in Saint-Savin, Gironde. In Nice, Éric Ciotti won with 48.54% against Christian Estrosi (37.20%) and Juliette Chesnel-Le Roux (14.26%). In Orange (Vaucluse), RN topples the Bompard dynasty; Montargis (Loiret), La Flèche (Sarthe, socialist stronghold since 1989), and Wittelsheim (Haut-Rhin, first in Alsace) also fall. In Pyrénées-Orientales, Rivesaltes and Canohès; in Pas-de-Calais, Liévin, Billy-Montigny, Oignies, Courcelles-lès-Lens, and Lillers. In Marseille, Franck Allisio placed second at 40.4% behind Benoît Payan (53.7%), per Elabe-Berger Levrault for BFMTV, RMC, and Le Figaro. In Toulon, Laure Lavalette got 47.65% against Josée Massi (52.35%).

Relaterede artikler

Illustrative map and scenes of French election results: left holds Paris, Marseille, Lyon; far-right gains 70 mayors in smaller cities.
Billede genereret af AI

French left keeps Paris, Marseille and Lyon as far right expands mayoral foothold

Rapporteret af AI Billede genereret af AI Faktatjekket

France’s left-wing coalitions held the mayoralties of Paris, Marseille and Lyon in the 2026 municipal elections, while Marine Le Pen’s National Rally said it increased its number of mayors to about 70 nationwide. The results also exposed continuing strains inside the left as conservatives and the far right notched gains in smaller and midsize cities.

As the 2026 municipal elections approach, the Rassemblement National (RN) aims to capture dozens of cities, signaling a shift in its local implantation strategy. This goal comes against a historical backdrop where the party, founded in 1972, focused primarily on presidential races under Jean-Marie Le Pen. Marine Le Pen has driven changes to build the movement's territorial legitimacy.

Rapporteret af AI

After winning 74 mayorships on March 22, the Rassemblement National (RN) has quietly secured presidencies in several intercommunalités, signaling further local entrenchment. Marine Le Pen congratulated Louis Aliot on his re-election as president of Perpignan's urban community. These polls, dubbed the 'third round' of municipal elections, hold strategic importance for the party.

Turnout in the second round of the 2026 municipal elections reached 57%, according to an Elabe-Berger Levrault estimate for BFMTV, RMC and Le Figaro. This figure is stable compared to the first round but 5.1 points lower than the 2014 second round. Significant disparities exist between departments and major cities.

Rapporteret af AI

The second round of the 2026 municipal and intercommunal elections involves voters in 1526 communes, about 17 million registered, with configurations from duels to quinquangulaires in cities like Paris, Lyon and Toulouse. Could the record first-round abstention of 42.90% decrease amid national stakes?

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.

Rapporteret af AI

One week before the first round of Nice's municipal elections, the four main candidates clashed in a debate hosted by BFM-TV in partnership with Le Figaro. Christian Estrosi, Éric Ciotti, Juliette Chesnel-Le Roux, and Mireille Damiano discussed geopolitics, campaign scandals, security, and housing. The exchanges were tense, featuring mutual accusations and concrete proposals for the city.

 

 

 

Dette websted bruger cookies

Vi bruger cookies til analyse for at forbedre vores side. Læs vores privatlivspolitik for mere information.
Afvis