Baltimore Sun Sunday

Nasty mayoral race digs at Paris’ dirty underbelly

- By Elaine Ganley

PARIS — The battle to win the hearts of Parisians and preside over France’s capital from the opulent city hall, has been nasty, and unpredicta­ble.

Parisians have been dished up a sex video scandal that triggered the surprise withdrawal of the candidate for President Emmanuel Macron’s party, a last-minute replacemen­t and mud-slinging about the filth of Paris streets. As Sunday’s first round of municipal elections approaches, voters have been left to contemplat­e the underbelly of the City of Light.

Three women top polls, including incumbent Mayor Anne Hidalgo, a Socialist best known for her divisive effort to rid Paris of cars. She wants to create “miniforest­s” with 170,000 newly planted trees and make the city center fully bicycle-friendly.

Trees, plenty of them, from urban forests to planted promenades, made a late appearance on the agendas of most of the eight candidates in the Paris race of France’s municipal elections.

The nationwide voting is about local issues and centers on choosing the mayor, traditiona­lly the most liked political figure among French. But local elections can help lay the groundwork for presidenti­al voting in two years, so the stakes are high, and Paris — where the next mayor will host the 2024 Olympics — is the crown jewel.

Macron risks a huge humiliatio­n. His centrist party, The Republic on the Move, which he created from scratch before his 2017 election, lacks local power bases, meaning it is likely to fare poorly.

Seized during the French Revolution, set afire in a brutal 1871 repression,

Paris City Hall, drenched in 338 statues and grander than the presidenti­al Elysee Palace, is indeed a plum. Protocol demands that visiting heads of state visit the Paris mayor.

Rachida Dati, a conservati­ve justice minister under former President Nicolas Sarkozy, is tasting victory.

A reborn Dati, who exchanged her extravagan­t tastes for no-nonsense dress and an austere style, is running neck-and-neck with Hidalgo. Dati puts cleaning up Paris streets and securing them with armed municipal police and a plethora of video cameras her priority.

“It’s anarchy everywhere” and “revolting filth,” she said in a debate last week when candidates hurled verbal daggers at Hidalgo.

Third in recent polls and a late-comer, Agnes Buzyn, a physician, was no kinder to the current mayor, saying that “we will all die” if Paris, Europe’s most densely populated capital, doesn’t cool down, a reference to the omnipresen­t concrete and Hidalgo’s project to build more towers.

Buzyn was plucked from her job as health minister in mid-February amid the world crisis over the deadly COVID-19 virus to replace

Macron’s candidate. Clearly pitching for votes from the conservati­ve camp, she, too, wants armed municipal police for the capital she grew up in, along with clean streets.

Most of the five other candidates have cameo roles — but could prove crucial to forming alliances ahead of the March 22 second round — or the so-called third round, when newly elected city councilors choose the new Paris mayor who ultimately is indirectly elected.

Buzyn was named a candidate on Feb. 16, two days after Benjamin Griveaux pulled out of the race. Griveaux, former government spokesman, abruptly announced his departure after a graphic sex video began circulatin­g online.

Buzyn politely dropped Griveaux’s grand plan to move a major Paris train station to make way for a New York-style Central Park in the French capital, but quickly became a feisty contender.

Like Macron’s party, Dati’s conservati­ve The Republican­s party is in free fall, hoping for a revival, just like the Socialists who tanked during the 2017 presidenti­al election.

Going into the race, only Hidalgo stands as a prominent flagbearer for the Socialists.

 ?? CHRISTOPHE ENA/AP ?? A woman walks past a poster for Paris mayoral candidate Marcel Campion. Local French elections begin Sunday.
CHRISTOPHE ENA/AP A woman walks past a poster for Paris mayoral candidate Marcel Campion. Local French elections begin Sunday.

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