RN targets 2026 municipal elections despite history of local setbacks

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.

The Rassemblement National (RN) is gearing up for the 2026 municipal elections with hopes of substantial gains. Party president Jordan Bardella is targeting cities such as Marseille, Toulon, Nice, and Nîmes, aiming to secure dozens of municipalities. The first round is scheduled for March 15.

Historically, the Front National (FN), the RN's predecessor founded in 1972 by Jean-Marie Le Pen, overlooked local polls. The former leader viewed the presidential race as the sole key contest since the 1962 referendum on electing the head of state by universal suffrage. Under his guidance, the party maintained a marginal role in territorial elections, prioritizing Le Pen's personal ambitions.

A shift occurred under Marine Le Pen, who assumed leadership to advance "dédiabolisation" through local implantation. In July 2024, following partial legislative elections, she urged a party "aggiornamento." In an interview with the weekly Valeurs actuelles, she stated: “The RN has always been a very centralized movement in its organization, concedes the Pas-de-Calais deputy. Everything comes from headquarters, for headquarters, and through headquarters. This setup is no longer viable amid the electoral growth crisis we are facing.” This appeal aims to adapt the RN's centralized structure to its expanding electorate.

This strategy marks a departure from the party's past failures and thwarted ambitions over fifty years, which included deadlocks and symbolic victories. The current focus seeks to address the lack of territorial legitimacy that burdens the RN's national aspirations.

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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.

After winning 74 mayorships on March 22, the Rassemblement National (RN) has quietly secured presidencies in several intercommunalités, signaling further local entrenchment. Marine Le Pen congratulated Louis Aliot on his re-election as president of Perpignan's urban community. These polls, dubbed the 'third round' of municipal elections, hold strategic importance for the party.

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In the second round of the 2026 municipal elections on March 22, the National Rally (RN) and its allies captured 36 towns, adding to 18 won in the first round. Key victories include Nice, Orange, and Montargis, per initial Interior Ministry results.

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