Marseille far-right mayoral candidate tied with leftist incumbent, exit poll shows

A man walks past election posters on the day of the first round of the French mayoral election, in Paris, France, March 15, 2026. REUTERS
PARIS, March 15 (Reuters) – Marseille’s leftist mayor and his far-right rival were tied in ​Sunday’s first-round municipal election, an Ipsos exit poll showed, in a major boost for the ‌nationalist National Rally’s once-unthinkable hopes of claiming France’s No. 2 city.
A divisive anti-immigration and eurosceptic party, the RN is now France’s largest parliamentary bloc and polls suggest it could win next year’s presidential election. It has long struggled to build a ​power base across French towns and cities, so a victory in Marseille in next week’s run-off ​vote would provide a huge boost to its 2027 presidential hopes.
Marseille was among the ⁠first French cities to report exit polls in Sunday’s mayoral election, in which voters will elect the leaders ​of some 35,000 towns and cities across France.
The vote serves as a test of the strength of the ​far-right and the resilience of mainstream parties ahead of next year’s presidential election.
Incumbent Socialist Mayor Benoit Payan was seen with 35.4% of the Marseille vote, Ipsos said, with the RN’s Franck Allisio also on 35.4%. A candidate from the far-left France Unbowed ​and from a centrist coalition also made the run-off, resulting in a four-way second-round vote that is hard ​to predict.
Marseille has become the epicentre of France’s battle with growing drug crime, and both Payan and Allisio have made ‌security the ⁠centrepiece of their campaigns.
Polls show security is the top concern for voters going into the nationwide municipal elections, a trend that is seen benefiting the RN and its tough-on-crime rhetoric.
RN party president Jordan Bardella claimed to have done well in many municipalities around France.
Exit polls showed it had won Perpignan near the Spanish border ​straight from the first round, ​in one of the ⁠biggest cities it already controls. Its candidate in the southern city of Toulon, one of the main cities it hoped to claim, also came first in first-round ​votes, according to an exit poll.
There were signs of resilience among mainstream parties, however.
Former ​French Prime ⁠Minister Edouard Philippe came first in Sunday’s first-round mayoral vote in his northern city of Le Havre, delivering a better-than-expected performance that boosts his hopes of running for president in 2027.
In Paris, Socialist Emmanuel Gregoire came in first, ⁠with a ​significant lead over conservative Rachida Dati, while the rising star of ​the far-right, Sarah Knafo, appeared to have underperformed opinion polls.

Reporting by Ingrid Melander, Juliette Jabkhiro, Leigh Thomas, Michel Rose, Layli Foroudi, Manon ​Cruz; Writing by Ingrid Melander; Editing by Andrei Khalip and Elaine Hardcastle, Gabriel Stargardter, Diane Craft and Deepa Babington

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