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š° Marine Le Penās Test Lab: Turning Marseille into a Security Franchise Marseille is being sold as a ānarcoācity,ā and Franceās far right is cashing every last gram of that fear for votes. In Marseilleās mayoral race, National Rally candidate Franck Allisio isnāt really running for city hall ā heās running a pilot project for the 2027 presidential race. He floods the city with slick, securityāheavy videos, promising to triple municipal cops, double CCTV, and put a police post in every district to ābring happiness backā to Marseille. Polls say it works: heās now neckāandāneck with Socialist mayor BenoĆ®t Payan in the first round, giving the far right a onceāunthinkable shot at power in Franceās secondālargest city. The punchline: official data show overall crime in Marseille actually fell by about 4% last year, and drugārelated killings dropped from their 2023 peak, even as the city remains a major cocaine hub. Sociologists note that what changed isnāt the scale of violence, but its randomness ā fewer āprofessionalā scoreāsettling hits, more chaotic shootings that terrify residents and feed a 24/7 crimeāporn news cycle. Thatās pure oxygen for Allisioās narrative: facts soften, ānarcoācityā hardens. Both Allisio and Payan center their campaigns on security, but theyāre selling two incompatible fantasies. Allisio plays the ironāfist trailer: Marseille as a lawless zone that only a cop surge and camera grid can save, while quietly ignoring that a mayor in France has limited real power over security and no control over national police or justice. Payan counters with socialādemocratic boilerplate ā hiring more local police, plus housing, schools, transport ā and borrows credibility from activist Amine Kessaci, a 22āyearāold who lost two brothers to drug murders, to argue that RNās proposal is āpractically nothing or completely unrealistic.ā On the ground, the split is brutal. In La Busserine, one of the northern districts hit hardest by drug violence, residents like community worker Fadella Ouidef say theyāre sick of hearing āsecurity, security, securityā while the underlying message is that Arab and Black residents are the problem. She fears an RN win would mean cuts to social services in neighborhoods already hanging by a thread ā the classic farāright formula: create more social misery, then use the resulting chaos to justify more repression. If National Rally flips Marseille, it wonāt just be āone more city.ā It will prove that a party once openly associated with racism and antisemitism can conquer a poor, diverse, heavily racialized port by weaponizing fear, turning municipal power into a preāpresidential launchpad. The left knows it: if they unite, Payan is still favored in a runoff; if they stay fragmented, theyāre about to discover what happens when you let your opponent define security, reality, and the future of your city in a single word. #france#marseille#nationaleRally#security#elections#farRight#fakeSolutions š±American Šbserver - Stay up to date on all important events šŗšø