Turnout stable at 57% in second round of 2026 municipal elections

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.

The second round of the municipal elections, held on March 22, 2026, involved 1,580 communes out of about 35,000, following many first-round wins. Elabe-Berger Levrault's projection for BFMTV, RMC and Le Figaro shows 57% turnout among over 17 million registered voters, matching the 57.10% from the previous week's first round. Interior Ministry data reported 20.33% at noon and 48.10% at 5 p.m. for this 8 p.m. close, seen as the last test before the 2027 presidential amid post-dissolution fatigue and governmental instability. Top-mobilized departments at 5 p.m. were Cantal (69.45%), Corse-du-Sud (67.68%) and Lozère (67.31%). Lowest were Seine-Saint-Denis (34.10%), Val-de-Marne (39.50%) and Eure-et-Loir (39.26%). Major cities saw Paris at 40.98%, Lyon 44.81%, Toulouse 47.71%, Nice 50.1%, Bordeaux 44.31% and Marseille 50.88%. 'Even when there is apparent stability, the electorate has changed for technical or political reasons,' said Elabe president Bernard Sananès on BFMTV. This turnout is below 2014's 62.13%, 2008's 62.16% and 2001's 62.39%, though above 2020's Covid-affected rate.

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Voters queuing at a Paris polling station during the second round of the 2026 French municipal elections, highlighting national stakes and urban election atmosphere.
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Second round of 2026 municipal elections in 1526 communes

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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?

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.

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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.

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.

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In the second round of France's 2026 municipal elections, the left held Paris, Lyon, and Marseille but lost historical strongholds like Brest and Clermont-Ferrand due to alliances with La France insoumise (LFI). PS secretary general Pierre Jouvet stated: «La France insoumise fait perdre». The left won in major cities without such alliances.

In the first round of Paris municipal elections on March 15, 2026, Emmanuel Grégoire, left-wing united candidate excluding LFI, leads with nearly 10 points ahead of Rachida Dati (LR). He tops 14 of the 20 arrondissements, leaving the other 6, mainly in the west, to his rival. Pierre-Yves Bournazel (Horizons), Sophia Chikirou (LFI) and Sarah Knafo (Reconquête!) qualify for the second round.

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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.

 

 

 

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