In Le Havre, Edouard Philippe, mayor since 2010 and presidential candidate, will face a united left list in the March 2026 municipal elections. His opponents are banking on the weariness of his long tenure following comfortable re-elections in 2014 and 2020. The leader acknowledged that a local defeat would harm his national ambitions.
The municipal elections in Le Havre, set for March 15 and 22, 2026, pose a critical test for Edouard Philippe, a Horizons member and mayor since 2010. He succeeded his mentor Antoine Rufenacht, who died in 2020, and secured an easy re-election in 2020 after dominating the left, which was swept aside in 2014.
The local left, led by a united list for the first time – though past tensions between communists and ecologists linger –, sees an opening in the erosion of his power. Baptiste Bauza, secretary of the Havre PCF section, believes: « There is a weariness of power. The election is open and we are capable of winning it ».
Philippe, eyeing the presidency, conceded on LCI on December 8 that a Havre defeat would leave him « not in a good position to hope to convince the French ». Could this working-class and popular port city, a communist stronghold at the end of the 20th century, shift again? The campaign won't start until early next year, but the stakes are already evident in the sea air of Seine-Maritime.