RN's management in Rognac targeted by complaints over authoritarian methods

In Rognac, Bouches-du-Rhône, the Rassemblement National's takeover in late November 2024 faces criticism after sixteen months. Five deputies resigned on February 4, denouncing a lack of consultation and democratic drifts. Complaints of harassment and dismissals question the party's promised exemplary 'method'.

The Rassemblement National (RN) took control of Rognac town hall, a 12,500-resident commune in Bouches-du-Rhône, in late November 2024, succeeding Sylvie Miceli-Houdais (Union des démocrates et indépendants) and Stéphane Le Rudulier (Les Républicains). Mayor RN Christophe Gonzalez promised to end the predecessors' mismanagement, drawing on a regional audit chamber report for 2020-2024. The report highlighted a 'deficit of supervision and expertise', significant staff turnover, and a 'deterioration of the social climate'.

RN leaders and their ally, Union des droites pour la République—including deputy Franck Allisio—saw Rognac as a model of transparency, especially in human resources, replicable in other municipalities. Gonzalez stated at the time: « We are running the “Kärcher” ».

Sixteen months later, this goal appears undermined. On February 4, five deputies, including first deputy Benoît Bourrillon, relinquished their delegations. They cite « authoritarian methods, a lack of consultation, and a concerning drift in democratic debate within the municipal council ». Multiple reports mention harassment, sidelining, and dismissals. Gonzalez, seeking re-election, confronts these accusations that tarnish the RN's regional image.

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Jordan Bardella speaks energetically at Rassemblement National's municipal campaign launch in Agde, with cheering supporters and party flags.
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Jordan Bardella does not rule out municipal alliances against extreme left

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Rassemblement national president Jordan Bardella launched the party's municipal campaign on Saturday in Agde and Carcassonne, not ruling out union lists in the second round against the risk of an extreme left victory. He reaffirmed support for Marine Le Pen, on trial in appeal for fake jobs, and said he is preparing to become head of government. These statements come ahead of the March 15 and 22 municipal elections.

Two weeks before the candidacy deadline, the charter launched by the Rassemblement National (RN) to rally right-wing mayors has been signed by only a few dozen elected officials. This initiative, aiming to secure their support in exchange for programmatic commitments, is seen as disconnected from local realities. Julien Sanchez, the RN's campaign director, had boasted of its potential success in December 2025.

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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.

On day six of the Paris appeal trial over alleged misuse of EU funds by Rassemblement National (RN) parliamentary assistants, Perpignan mayor Louis Aliot invoked 'great disorder' on January 22, 2026, to explain hiring militant Laurent Salles without an interview. This follows Marine Le Pen's earlier testimony, as covered in our ongoing series.

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In the Somme department, once dotted with communist strongholds, PCF-affiliated mayors are now few and far between amid economic decline and the rise of the Rassemblement national. In Woincourt, Mayor Arnaud Petit laments the nighttime posting of an RN poster, a sign of mounting pressure on left-wing bastions. Aging militants and a lack of successors make political survival precarious ahead of the 2026 elections.

The Rassemblement national, buoyed by wins in Hénin-Beaumont in 2014 and Bruay-la-Buissière in 2020, aims to expand into left-wing strongholds in the Pas-de-Calais mining basin for municipal elections.

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Nathalie Koenders, François Rebsamen's socialist successor, begins her first municipal campaign in Dijon against a divided left and an optimistic right. Elected mayor on November 25, 2024, the 48-year-old inherits a term shaped by 25 years of socialist governance. Her right-wing rival, Emmanuel Bichot, bets on change after a quarter-century in power.

 

 

 

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