Socialist Grégoire Becomes Paris Mayor as the Far Right Wins Nice in Key Municipal Elections
French socialist candidate for Paris mayoral election, Emmanuel Gregoire gives a speech after he won the second round of France’s municipal elections in Paris, France, Sunday, March 22, 2026.
11:29 JST, March 23, 2026
PARIS (AP) — Socialist candidate Emmanuel Grégoire won the Paris race Sunday, succeeding fellow party member Anne Hidalgo as the French capital’s mayor, as results of the final round of municipal elections showed clear gains for the traditional left and right, and one major win for the far right in the French Riviera city of Nice.
French voters returned to the polls Sunday in about 1,500 communes. The vote is seen as a test of the balance of power on France’s local political map before the 2027 presidential race begins to take shape.
Definitive results were still pending Sunday evening in largest cities.
About 93% of 35,000 villages, towns and cities selected their mayors in the first round last week, with mostly one or two candidates, not associated with any party, competing.
Left-wing leadership for 25 years in Paris
Grégoire, who led a list uniting the traditional left, the Greens and the Communists, claimed victory after estimates based on partial results placed him well ahead of conservative rival Rachida Dati, who acknowledged defeat.
Grégoire said “tonight is the victory of a certain vision of Paris: a vibrant Paris, a progressive Paris,” before heading on a bicycle through the streets of Paris to the City Hall, where he was greeted by Hidalgo. The French capital has had a left-wing leadership for 25 years.
Grégoire said Parisians made a clear choice in favor of the left as Dati, the right-wing candidate, was backed by the far right. “This message is clear: Paris is not, and never will be, a far-right city,” he said. “Starting tomorrow, our country enters its next democratic challenge: the 2027 presidential election.”
Hidalgo, elected in 2014 and reelected in 2020, chose not to seek a third term after leading the city through the 2015 extremist attacks and the 2024 Paris Olympics. Mayors and municipal councilors are elected for six years.
Resounding far right victory in Nice
Nice, France’s fifth largest city on the French Riviera, becomes the most resounding win of the far right Sunday with the victory of Eric Ciotti, a former conservative who allied with the National Rally of Marine Le Pen.
However, Le Pen’s party lost in several cities it had identified as top priorities.
That includes the Mediterranean city of Marseille, France’s second largest city, where incumbent left-wing Mayor Benoît Payan won over National Rally candidate Franck Allisio.
Far-right politicians have lost to mainstream rivals in the southern cities of Nîmes and the port of Toulon, a major naval base on the Mediterranean, which were two key targets for the National Rally.
Still, National Rally president Jordan Bardella praised victories in smaller towns and election of many municipal councilors across France, calling it “the greatest breakthrough in their history in this municipal election,” Bardella said.
“The successes of this evening are not an end, but a beginning,” he said.
Key races ahead of next year’s presidential election
Other large-city contests have also been watched closely.
In the northern port city of Le Havre, incumbent Mayor Édouard Philippe won a clear victory that strengthens his political standing as a potential presidential contender. Philippe, a center-right politician, was President Emmanuel Macron ’s prime minister for three years.
Macron’s centrist movement, which lacks local grassroots support, achieved one major result in the southwestern city of Bordeaux, where its candidate Thomas Cazenave, a former minister, won over the Green party outgoing mayor. Macron’s party kept a low profile in many of the most closely watched races.
Some linked Sunday’s vote to a darker international backdrop and to the presidential race looming next year. “We have war in Ukraine, war in Gaza, war in the Middle East,” said Elena Van Langhenhoven, 81. “And France, will it see a major shift next year, in the presidential elections? It’s horrendous.”
Top Articles in News Services
-
Trump Extends the Ceasefire with Iran but Keeps the Blockade
-
Trump Opposes United–American Merger, Signals Support for Spirit
-
Florida Launches Criminal Probe into OpenAI and ChatGPT over Deadly Shooting
-
Trump Picks a University of Minnesota Professor to Lead His Economic Council
-
Taiwan President Cancels Africa Trip Blaming Chinese Pressure
JN ACCESS RANKING
-
Earthquake Hits Japan’s Tohoku Region; 3-meter Tsunami Warning Issued (Update 1)
-
Police Find Child’s Shoe During Search for Missing Boy in Nantan, Kyoto Prefecture
-
Body Found in Nantan, Kyoto Prefecture, During Search for 11-Year-Old Boy in Area (Update 1)
-
Cherry Blossoms, Rapeseed Flowers Perform Colorful ‘Duet’ in Niigata
-
Trump Extends the Ceasefire with Iran but Keeps the Blockade
Most read in the last 24 hours
-
China, South Korea Object to Japanese PM Takaichi's Ritual Offeri...
-
Trump Opposes United–American Merger, Signals Support for Spirit
-
Florida Launches Criminal Probe into OpenAI and ChatGPT over Dead...
-
Japan's ANA to Introduce Fuel Surcharges to Domestic Flights from...
-
Taiwan President Cancels Africa Trip Blaming Chinese Pressure
Most read in the last 7 days
-
Earthquake Hits Japan's Tohoku Region; 3-meter Tsunami Warning Is...
-
Trump Extends the Ceasefire with Iran but Keeps the Blockade
-
Olympic Gold Medal-Winning Figure Skaters Riku-Ryu Announce Retir...
-
China, South Korea Object to Japanese PM Takaichi's Ritual Offeri...
-
Japan to Ban Use of Portable Chargers on Airplanes from April 24,...
Most read in the last 30 days
-
Earthquake Hits Japan's Tohoku Region; 3-meter Tsunami Warning Is...
-
Police Find Child's Shoe During Search for Missing Boy in Nantan,...
-
Body Found in Nantan, Kyoto Prefecture, During Search for 11-Year...
-
Cherry Blossoms, Rapeseed Flowers Perform Colorful ‘Duet’ in Niig...
-
Trump Extends the Ceasefire with Iran but Keeps the Blockade

