Voters queuing at a Paris polling station during the second round of the 2026 French municipal elections, highlighting national stakes and urban election atmosphere.
Voters queuing at a Paris polling station during the second round of the 2026 French municipal elections, highlighting national stakes and urban election atmosphere.
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Second round of 2026 municipal elections in 1526 communes

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The second round of the 2026 municipal and intercommunal elections involves voters in 1526 communes, about 17 million registered, with configurations from duels to quinquangulaires in cities like Paris, Lyon and Toulouse. Could the record first-round abstention of 42.90% decrease amid national stakes?

The second round of the 2026 municipal elections, set for this Sunday, covers 1526 communes and about 17 million registered voters, per Fig Data. Voters will decide 548 duels, 803 triangulaires, 159 quadrangulaires and 16 quinquangulaires, especially in Paris, Lyon, Toulouse, Bordeaux, Strasbourg and Nîmes. First-round abstention hit 42.90%, a record outside health crises, partly due to no competition in 68% of communes and the ban on list-splitting in those under 1000 inhabitants. A turnout surge is anticipated amid uncertainties. In Paris, an Elabe-Berger Levrault poll for Le Figaro, BFMTV and La Tribune Dimanche shows Emmanuel Grégoire (PS-PCF-Écologistes) at 37.98% from round one, narrowly ahead of Rachida Dati after fusing with Pierre-Yves Bournazel, as Sophia Chikirou holds her base. Polls point to tight races in major cities like Marseille, Toulouse and Le Havre. Over 16.8 million voters head to polls, eyes on urban areas.

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X discussions highlight tight polls in major cities for the second round of the 2026 municipal elections, with Grégoire slightly ahead of Dati in Paris, Doucet tied with Aulas in Lyon, and close races in Marseille and Toulouse. Users predict modest turnout increases from the first round's 42.9% abstention, attributing potential rises to national stakes. Sentiments range from optimism on strategic voting to skepticism about alliances with LFI or RN, and calls for mobilization in key battles.

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Vibrant scene of France's 2026 municipal election campaign launch in a town square, featuring candidate posters and enthusiastic crowds.
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France's 2026 municipal election campaign opens with over 50 000 candidate lists

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The official campaign for France's 2026 municipal elections began on March 2, featuring over 50 000 lists and 900 000 candidates across 34 944 communes. Despite parity mandated by a 2025 law, more than three-quarters of the lists are led by men. The votes are scheduled for March 15 and 22.

List deposits closed Tuesday evening, setting lineups for the municipal elections second round on March 22. Numerous alliances, technical fusions, and withdrawals—especially on the left between LFI and PS—have simplified duels and triangulaires. Nearly 124,097 candidates compete in 1526 communes.

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Turnout in the second round of the 2026 municipal elections reached 57%, according to an Elabe-Berger Levrault estimate for BFMTV, RMC and Le Figaro. This figure is stable compared to the first round but 5.1 points lower than the 2014 second round. Significant disparities exist between departments and major cities.

Amid a national retreat from ecological ambitions, emblematic environmental measures are becoming more consensual at the municipal level. In Paris, Les Républicains candidate Rachida Dati includes green proposals in her program for the March 15 and 22, 2026 elections. Yet, some issues remain contentious.

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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%.

David Guiraud, a 33-year-old deputy close to La France insoumise (LFI), secured 46.64% of the votes in the first round of municipal elections in Roubaix (Nord), ahead of all competitors on Sunday evening. He doubled the score of outgoing right-wing mayor Alexandre Garcin (20.09%) and tripled that of left-wing rival Karim Amrouni (16.76%).

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As the municipal elections on March 15 and 22 approach, candidates rarely discuss cultural projects despite the deep ties between culture and local authorities. The cultural sector, previously shielded, is now a budgetary adjustment variable for cash-strapped municipalities. Local funding, vital for culture, faces increased constraints since 2024.

 

 

 

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