Socialists battle to hold Paris in key mayoral elections across France
Socialists battle to hold Paris in key mayoral elections across France 5 hours ago Hugh SchofieldParis correspondent, Paris Mayors for France's major towns and cities will be chosen on Sunday, in the last vote before next year's presidential elections. Excitement is especially high in Paris and Nice.
And on the Riviera, a hard-right ally of Marine Le Pen's National Rally (RN), Eric Ciotti, seems on course for victory.
In many of these places, it has now formed alliances with other left-wing lists – mainly from the Socialist Party (PS) or Greens – in order to concentrate the anti-right vote.
The city's centre-right mayor Jean-Luc Moudenc came first in round one, with 37% of the vote.
But he was followed by two left-wingers, François Piquemal (27.
5%) of LFI, and the Socialist François Briançon (25%).
These two have now merged their lists, giving them a clear lead over Moudenc on paper.
If they win it will be the hard-left Piquemal who becomes Toulouse mayor.
The test is to see whether the left/hard-left alliance acts as a clarion call to Toulouse voters or a turn-off.
The fact of the matter is that these alliances have been forged just weeks after the Socialists led the rest of the mainstream left in a chorus of condemnation of LFI, vowing to forego any future nationwide all-left coalition unless it changed its ways. This followed the murder of a far-right student in Lyon by suspected far-left militants, including the parliamentary assistant of an LFI MP; and then a speech by Mélenchon in which he performed a nod-and-a-wink to his audience about the Jewish identity of late sex criminal Jeffrey Epstein. For opponents of the left, the Socialists have ditched their principles at the first test – tying themselves once again to LFI out of fear of losing votes on their outside flank.
Commentators of all shades see these developments as a sign of Mélenchon's growing confidence ahead of next year's presidential election, his aim being to become the main depository of left-wing votes ahead of a run-off against Marine Le Pen or the RN's president Jordan Bardella. Not every city has seen an all-left pact. In Paris, the Socialist Emmanuel Grégoire refused an alliance with LFI candidate Sophia Chikirou, who remains in the race.
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