Benoît Payan criticizes Martine Vassal's values during Marseille debate

During a televised debate on BFMTV Thursday evening, candidate Martine Vassal claimed values including «work, family, homeland», the Vichy regime's slogan, prompting Benoît Payan's reaction calling it Pétain's motto. The outgoing mayor also stated he would withdraw from the race if he trailed Sébastien Delogu in the first round to block the RN. One month before the municipal elections, a poll places Payan ahead with 31% of voting intentions.

The televised debate organized on BFMTV, in partnership with Le Figaro and La Provence, brought together Thursday evening the main candidates for the Marseille mayoralty in the 2026 municipal elections. Among them were Benoît Payan, outgoing mayor from Printemps marseillais, Martine Vassal from bloc central-LR, Franck Allisio from RN-UDR, and Sébastien Delogu from LFI.

During the exchange, Martine Vassal, president of the Bouches-du-Rhône department and the Aix-Marseille-Provence metropolis, listed her unchanged values throughout her political career: «It’s merit, work, family, homeland». This statement surprised Benoît Payan, who asked the candidate to repeat. «I think you said ‘work, family, homeland’?», he questioned. «Yes», Vassal replied. «It’s Mr. Pétain’s slogan», Payan retorted with dismay, noting that «Work, family, homeland» was the official motto of the French State under the Vichy regime.

Martine Vassal stood firm: «It’s my slogan and these are my values», adding «And merit too! And work too! And family too! That’s how it is». The other candidates watched the scene with amusement.

Earlier in the debate, Benoît Payan stated he would withdraw if he trailed Sébastien Delogu in the first round: «Yes», he answered moderator Apolline de Malherbe, though he nuanced by mentioning science fiction to express skepticism about that scenario. Delogu had affirmed he «will do everything to block» the RN.

Three weeks before the first round scheduled for March 15 and 22, 2026, an Elabe/Berger-Levrault poll for BFMTV, La Provence, and Le Figaro, conducted from February 9 to 16 among 1032 people, credits Payan with 31% of voting intentions, Allisio with 29%, Vassal with 21%, and Delogu with 12%. In 2020, Vassal lost to the left after 25 years of LR rule under Jean-Claude Gaudin.

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

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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.

During a televised debate on Marseille's municipal elections, right-wing candidate Martine Vassal adopted and defended the slogan 'work, family, homeland', linked to the Vichy regime, before adding 'humanity'. The moment halted discussions among key candidates, which focused on national controversies.

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In the second round of the 2026 Marseille municipal elections, Benoît Payan (DVG) retained the mayoralty with 54.34% of votes, against Franck Allisio (RN) at 40.30% and Martine Vassal at 5.36%. Payan's Printemps marseillais secured six of the city's eight sectors.

In Nîmes, two right-wing factions vie for the succession of Mayor Jean-Paul Fournier, who is not seeking re-election in the municipal elections. Julien Plantier and Valérie Rouverand have formalized their electoral alliance, while Franck Proust remains loyal to the Fournier clan. These divisions could benefit the united left and the National Rally.

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In Valognes, Manche, outgoing mayor Jacques Coquelin, from divers droite, allies with his left-wing opposition to seek a fourth term in the municipal elections on March 15 and 22. This 'multicolour' list includes socialist Fabrice Rodriguez and three minority elected officials. The arrangement draws reservations from part of the local left, especially La France insoumise militants.

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.

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The Nancy municipal elections, set for March 15 and 22, promise to be more open than in 2020. Outgoing socialist mayor Mathieu Klein, leading a union list without La France insoumise, will face his predecessor Laurent Hénart, backed by Les Républicains, MoDem, and Renaissance.

 

 

 

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