Rachida Dati unveils proposals for Paris municipal elections

Rachida Dati, the Culture Minister and Les Républicains candidate for Paris mayor, is outlining her program on mobility, security, and after-school care. Backed by MoDem, she criticizes current policies and suggests urban transformations for the Seine quays and Rue de Rivoli. Meanwhile, her energetic social media campaign, featuring viral videos, irks the left by highlighting Anne Hidalgo's record.

Rachida Dati, the Culture Minister and Les Républicains (LR) candidate for Paris mayor, backed by MoDem, is gradually unveiling her program ahead of the municipal elections. Facing a Paris she describes as 'blocked, fractured, exhausted by an ideology that pits transport modes against each other,' she proposes a 'global mobility scheme.'

For the Seine quays, far from reinstating cars, Dati envisions transforming them into a 'grand urban patrimonial park.' She aims to replace 'temporary installations with more qualitative urban furniture respectful of Parisian aesthetics,' reserve the lower quays for pedestrians, redirect cyclists to the upper quays, and create a continuous promenade space extendable beyond Paris.

On Rue de Rivoli, she promises to 'rebalance transport modes' by widening sidewalks for pedestrians, securing a bidirectional cycle path, and restoring a bus lane.

Meanwhile, her high-energy social media campaign is drawing ire. Since October, Dati has been posting dynamic videos where she stages herself on the ground, criticizing Socialist Mayor Anne Hidalgo's record— in office since 2014—on cleanliness, security, mobility, and housing. In a December 12 video, she visits the Rungis wholesale market, helping workers load goods and delivering to restaurateurs to identify delivery obstacles.

'There are places where the left no longer goes. I go everywhere, every week,' she boasts in her clips, which garner hundreds of thousands of views. She tours poorly maintained social housing or tunnels occupied by the homeless, like under Les Halles. This approach irks the left, who decry it as staged theatrics.

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Illustration of Rachida Dati resigning from Culture Ministry to campaign for Paris mayor.
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Rachida Dati resigns from Culture Ministry for Paris campaign

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Three weeks before municipal elections, Rachida Dati announced her resignation from the Culture Ministry to focus on her Paris mayoral candidacy. Appointed in January 2024, she submitted her letter to Emmanuel Macron on Wednesday, February 25, 2026. The president thanked her for her work and encouraged her electoral campaign.

Maud Gatel, MoDem's leader in Paris, announces her endorsement of Rachida Dati, the Republicans' candidate, for the 2026 Paris municipal elections. She believes Dati is the only one who can enable a change from the left. This support highlights convergence on priorities like debt reduction and climate adaptation.

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Rachida Dati, Les Républicains and MoDem candidate for Paris mayor—who secured MoDem's endorsement in December 2025—ruled out on March 5 any alliance with Reconquête's Sarah Knafo. She urged the right to rally behind her from the March 15 first round, warning that far-right pacts would alienate more centrist voters than they attract.

After 12 years leading the Palace of Versailles, 71-year-old Catherine Pégard has served as cultural advisor to Emmanuel Macron at the Élysée since September. Rumors position her as a potential successor to Rachida Dati at the Culture Ministry if Dati focuses fully on her Paris mayoral campaign. Pégard dismisses these speculations outright.

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The three candidates for the Paris municipal election runoff, Emmanuel Grégoire, Rachida Dati and Sophia Chikirou, clashed in a debate lasting over two and a half hours organized by Le Figaro and BFMTV on March 18, 2026. Discussions covered security, after-school care, housing and personal attacks. With four days until the vote, the race looks tight following post-first-round mergers and withdrawals.

Emmanuel Grégoire, former first deputy to Anne Hidalgo, has been elected mayor of Paris in the 2026 municipal elections second round, with around 50 to 53 percent of votes per Elabe estimates. He beats Rachida Dati (38 to 42 percent) and Sophia Chikirou (8 to 10 percent). The win extends left-wing rule in the capital.

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Sarah Knafo, Reconquête! candidate for Paris mayor, promotes an ambitious and rigorously costed program. Yet, analysis shows underestimated expenses and unrealistic savings in her 130-page manifesto. A flagship project, a two-kilometer promenade above the riverside expressways, raises technical and regulatory issues.

 

 

 

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