The Prague Post - Race for Paris mayor on knife's edge after first round

EUR -
AED 4.201851
AFN 73.22467
ALL 93.811873
AMD 419.617085
ANG 2.04847
AOA 1049.749629
ARS 1699.867328
AUD 1.644929
AWG 2.05945
AZN 1.934586
BAM 1.955414
BBD 2.299546
BDT 140.722194
BGN 1.934602
BHD 0.430417
BIF 3398.978783
BMD 1.144139
BND 1.477015
BOB 7.918435
BRL 5.889413
BSD 1.141774
BTN 108.854491
BWP 15.42302
BYN 3.307147
BYR 22425.122889
BZD 2.296246
CAD 1.625695
CDF 2580.033287
CHF 0.921289
CLF 0.02698
CLP 1061.852954
CNY 7.776023
CNH 7.773967
COP 3838.563204
CRC 520.199484
CUC 1.144139
CUP 30.319681
CVE 110.243216
CZK 24.167195
DJF 203.319825
DKK 7.474728
DOP 67.53695
DZD 152.33075
EGP 55.893931
ERN 17.162084
ETB 184.283192
FJD 2.559666
FKP 0.856905
GBP 0.854163
GEL 3.014786
GGP 0.856905
GHS 13.010429
GIP 0.856905
GMD 84.09723
GNF 10012.402649
GTQ 8.712278
GYD 238.832808
HKD 8.973184
HNL 30.560095
HRK 7.533811
HTG 149.20117
HUF 353.769468
IDR 20664.293087
ILS 3.429554
IMP 0.856905
INR 109.411431
IQD 1495.704455
IRR 1573991.915994
ISK 144.001811
JEP 0.856905
JMD 180.575108
JOD 0.811164
JPY 185.494098
KES 147.9337
KGS 100.055258
KHR 4581.114811
KMF 493.699971
KPW 1029.725431
KRW 1749.503375
KWD 0.354809
KYD 0.951512
KZT 539.683361
LAK 25745.912715
LBP 102242.497308
LKR 382.424435
LRD 207.229052
LSL 18.525239
LTL 3.378345
LVL 0.692078
LYD 7.325553
MAD 10.689688
MDL 20.129023
MGA 4849.063036
MKD 61.643864
MMK 2402.411025
MNT 4098.726208
MOP 9.224077
MRU 45.569195
MUR 53.854684
MVR 17.676622
MWK 1979.417526
MXN 19.88978
MYR 4.667055
MZN 73.1128
NAD 18.525239
NGN 1564.836354
NIO 42.004908
NOK 11.197579
NPR 174.168346
NZD 2.006533
OMR 0.439922
PAB 1.141774
PEN 3.887832
PGK 5.016965
PHP 70.262699
PKR 317.432764
PLN 4.289035
PYG 6925.631524
QAR 4.173975
RON 5.230776
RSD 117.354726
RUB 88.202337
RWF 1673.176699
SAR 4.300203
SBD 9.26458
SCR 16.628369
SDG 687.056455
SEK 11.015707
SGD 1.477844
SHP 0.854215
SLE 27.888398
SLL 23992.025337
SOS 652.473925
SRD 43.125994
STD 23681.365697
STN 24.494946
SVC 9.990026
SYP 126.464075
SZL 18.521421
THB 38.092859
TJS 10.561113
TMT 4.004486
TND 3.377533
TOP 2.754812
TRY 53.578771
TTD 7.731472
TWD 36.692417
TZS 3003.368133
UAH 50.911663
UGX 4171.175793
USD 1.144139
UYU 45.930924
UZS 13752.282606
VES 762.243868
VND 30090.853673
VUV 136.145643
WST 3.172911
XAF 655.830277
XAG 0.018478
XAU 0.000275
XCD 3.092093
XCG 2.057693
XDR 0.815642
XOF 655.827411
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.246774
ZAR 18.539227
ZMK 10298.637594
ZMW 21.036843
ZWL 368.412266
  • CMSC

    0.0700

    22.06

    +0.32%

  • CMSD

    0.0800

    22.23

    +0.36%

  • RBGPF

    -4.1100

    61.5

    -6.68%

  • BCC

    -0.6500

    75.28

    -0.86%

  • BTI

    -0.3100

    61.46

    -0.5%

  • NGG

    -0.2600

    82.59

    -0.31%

  • BCE

    -0.5500

    20.87

    -2.64%

  • JRI

    0.1100

    13.11

    +0.84%

  • RIO

    -0.8400

    93.58

    -0.9%

  • AZN

    -4.9900

    190.16

    -2.62%

  • GSK

    -0.5700

    53.09

    -1.07%

  • VOD

    -0.0700

    13.08

    -0.54%

  • RELX

    0.3400

    32.27

    +1.05%

  • RYCEF

    0.3400

    20.09

    +1.69%

  • BP

    -0.0100

    37.39

    -0.03%

Race for Paris mayor on knife's edge after first round
Race for Paris mayor on knife's edge after first round / Photo: JOEL SAGET - AFP/File

Race for Paris mayor on knife's edge after first round

The race for Paris mayor looked uncertain Monday as a right-wing former minister hoping to wrest control of the French capital from the left claimed she had gained key support for a second-round run-off.

Text size:

Rachida Dati, until recently France's culture minister, hopes to become the capital's second woman mayor in a row, and bring Paris under control of the right for the first time in 25 years.

Her main rival is Socialist former deputy mayor Emmanuel Gregoire, who came out well ahead of her in a first round of voting on Sunday.

But a new alliance on the right, if confirmed, could put them head-to-head.

Gregoire has promised to carry on the legacy of outgoing Socialist mayor Anne Hidalgo, including increasing the number of bike lanes and green spaces and improving public housing in the densely populated city of two million people.

Dati -- soon to go on trial for graft charges she denies -- has vowed to make the city cleaner and safer, pledging to improve rubbish collection, give weapons to municipal police officers and increase video surveillance.

Gregoire scored 37.98 percent of the vote, with Dati taking 25.46 percent. Three other candidates also made it through to the second round next Sunday.

The hard left's Sophia Chikirou came third with 11.72 percent followed by centre-right hopeful Pierre-Yves Bournazel with 11.34 percent, and far-right contender Sarah Knafo with 10.40 percent.

- Conditions -

With the second round just six days away, the race is on for leading candidates to form alliances.

Dati claimed on X she had teamed up with her centre-right opponent.

"We're going to work with Bournazel on a project for political change," she announced. "The lives of Parisians over the next six years are at stake."

A member of Bournazel's team however told AFP that "nothing had been decided yet".

The candidate said his conditions included Dati rejecting any alliance with the far-right candidate, who has offered to back her.

But President Emmanuel Macron has already approved Dati and Bournazel joining forces, according to a source at the Elysee Palace.

Bournazel also urged Dati to promise to overhaul the city's recruitment of school monitors, after uproar in recent months over allegations that several have physically or sexually abused kindergarten pupils.

Gregoire has pledged to improve the training of school monitors.

- 'Waiting for a call' -

Gregoire has refused to join forces with the hard-left France Unbowed (LFI) party's Chikirou, his team said.

She has said she would remain in the race, splitting the left, if Gregoire refused an alliance.

"I'm waiting for a call from Gregoire to block Dati's path in Paris," she wrote on X.

Several politicians on the left have refused to ally with the hard left after the killing last month of a far-right activist blamed on fringe leftists.

Dati is due to appear in court in September charged with corruption between 2010 and 2012 when she was a member of the European Parliament, but she has denied the charges.

Hidalgo, the outgoing mayor who beat Dati in the last election, has called on the left to rally around Gregoire.

She urged votes for Gregoire to stave off "the danger of populism, corruption, backsliding, policies that destroy environmental and social protections, and the dismantling of public services."

Supporters credit Hidalgo and her Green allies with boosting bike lanes and pushing out traffic from the city centre, and making the Seine swimmable for the first time in a century for the 2024 Summer Olympics.

But critics accuse her of merely shifting traffic elsewhere, while also allowing security, cleanliness and public transport to deteriorate.

Z.Marek--TPP