MoDem endorses Rachida Dati for Paris municipal elections

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.

Maud Gatel, president of the MoDem and independents group at the Paris Council (eight members) and secretary general of François Bayrou's party, announced her support for Rachida Dati in an interview with La Tribune Dimanche on December 14, 2025, for the March 2026 municipal elections. "It is time to open a new chapter, and we have found ourselves in Rachida Dati's proposals," she explains.

Gatel highlights Paris's current issues: degradation of public spaces, flight of families, budget wall, and dysfunctions in child social services. "Our capital is no longer administered. Paris is a jewel. As mayor of Paris, Rachida Dati will restore its luster," adds the former deputy. She emphasizes convergence between their projects, with Dati committing to adopt MoDem priorities, such as debt reduction to adapt the city to climate change and ending anarchy in public spaces.

For Gatel, Rachida Dati, current Minister of Culture and mayor of the 7th arrondissement, is "the only candidate who makes alternation possible," unlike Pierre-Yves Bournazel, Horizons candidate supported by Renaissance. This stance is bolstered by the electoral reform adopted in the summer, allowing direct election of the mayor. Asked about a potential alliance with Bournazel in the second round, Gatel states that "Rachida Dati has clearly said that the first-round list would be the same as the second-round one".

An Ipsos poll for Le Parisien, published on December 13, gives the left list led by Emmanuel Grégoire 32% of voting intentions for the first round on March 15, 2026, ahead of Dati's list supported by MoDem at 27%, Bournazel at 14%, and Sophia Chikirou at 13%.

This endorsement strengthens Dati's candidacy on the right, amid divisions on the right and expected left dominance.

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Jordan Bardella at a Paris rally, calling on voters to support Rachida Dati in municipal election runoff.
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Jordan Bardella calls on Parisians to vote for Rachida Dati

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RN president Jordan Bardella urged Parisian voters on Tuesday evening to block the left and far-left by voting for Rachida Dati in the municipal runoff. He said he would personally vote for the LR-MoDem candidate if registered in Paris. This comes after Sarah Knafo's withdrawal and the merger with Pierre-Yves Bournazel.

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.

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Rachida Dati, Les Républicains (LR) candidate who came second in the first round of Paris municipal elections with 25.46% of votes, and Pierre-Yves Bournazel from Horizons-Renaissance with 11.34%, agreed to merge their lists on Monday afternoon. They aim to unite the right and center against Socialist Emmanuel Grégoire, leading with 37.98%, and a divided left including Sophia Chikirou (LFI) at 11.73%.

An Ifop-Fiducial poll for Paris Match and Sud Radio, published on March 19, 2026, gives Emmanuel Grégoire 46% voting intentions in Paris's second round, ahead of Rachida Dati at 44%. Sophia Chikirou gets 10%.

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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.

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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Three weeks before Paris municipal elections, socialist candidate Emmanuel Grégoire held an unprecedented exchange with residents, lacking a debate with main rival Rachida Dati. The event took place on Sunday at Place de la Bataille-de-Stalingrad in the 19th arrondissement.

 

 

 

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