Municipal elections in Romans-sur-Isère overshadowed by Crépol incident

The 2026 municipal election campaign in Romans-sur-Isère, a town of 33,000 residents, unfolds in a heavy atmosphere. Three years after the murder of a teenager at a country ball in Crépol in 2023, fears and resentments linger. Outgoing mayor Marie-Hélène Thoraval struggles to ease these tensions, amplified by a national narrative of ethnic confrontation.

The village of Crépol in the Drôme department remains scarred by the murder of Thomas Perotto, a teenager stabbed on November 19, 2023, during a country ball. This event has solidified tensions between surrounding rural areas and the working-class neighborhoods of Romans-sur-Isère, located 20 kilometers to the south. Some Crépol residents, like Emilie, a 40-year-old former police officer, now carry a switchblade in their bag and avoid the town, particularly the La Monnaie district, from which some suspects under investigation originate.

Emilie, a mother who has voted far-right for eighteen years, says she once brought her category 1 Labrador to work for protection. Her husband, Julien, a building worker, voices intense anger: “If it had been me, I would have planted a bomb to blow it all up there. So what if there are 99% good and 1% bad.” By “there,” he means the urban areas seen as risky.

Another local, Christophe, a 43-year-old mason, tries to contextualize the incident: “Words came out wrong, the rugby players got scared, and it all went to hell.” Yet, the narrative pitting “Whites” against “Arabs” has taken hold in national media and politics, also shaping local discourse.

Marie-Hélène Thoraval, mayor of Romans-sur-Isère since 2014 and seeking re-election from the right, confronts this lingering shadow. Elected amid divisions, she has not managed to dispel the fears, making the electoral campaign especially burdensome in this Drôme town.

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Illustrative map and scenes of French election results: left holds Paris, Marseille, Lyon; far-right gains 70 mayors in smaller cities.
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French left keeps Paris, Marseille and Lyon as far right expands mayoral foothold

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France’s left-wing coalitions held the mayoralties of Paris, Marseille and Lyon in the 2026 municipal elections, while Marine Le Pen’s National Rally said it increased its number of mayors to about 70 nationwide. The results also exposed continuing strains inside the left as conservatives and the far right notched gains in smaller and midsize cities.

Jean-Claude Villemain, former mayor of Creil, was filmed and mocked by a woman moments after learning of his socialist list's defeat in the municipal elections. The video, posted on TikTok, shows her repeatedly shouting «Au revoir Jean-Claude!». The city shifts to La France insoumise after a century of socialist rule.

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On March 28, 2026, Omar Yaqoob of La France Insoumise (LFI) took control of Creil town hall, the third-largest commune in Oise. This multicultural city of 37,000 residents, with 107 nationalities, 25% unemployment, and over 50% social housing, had been a socialist stronghold for over a century. Residents voice fears of rising tensions following campaign incidents.

Christian Estrosi, Nice's mayor for eighteen years, lost to Éric Ciotti, his former protégé turned rival, in the 2026 municipal elections' second round. The politician announced his withdrawal from political life while facing several judicial cases. He delivered a carefully prepared farewell speech.

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