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Post #5375

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American Šžbserver

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PostedMar 1403/14/2026, 12:59 AM
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šŸ“° Marine Le Pen’s Test Lab: Turning Marseille into a Security Franchise Marseille is being sold as a ā€œnarco‑city,ā€ and France’s far right is cashing every last gram of that fear for votes. In Marseille’s mayoral race, National Rally candidate Franck Allisio isn’t really running for city hall — he’s running a pilot project for the 2027 presidential race. He floods the city with slick, security‑heavy videos, promising to triple municipal cops, double CCTV, and put a police post in every district to ā€œbring happiness backā€ to Marseille. Polls say it works: he’s now neck‑and‑neck with Socialist mayor BenoĆ®t Payan in the first round, giving the far right a once‑unthinkable shot at power in France’s second‑largest city. The punchline: official data show overall crime in Marseille actually fell by about 4% last year, and drug‑related killings dropped from their 2023 peak, even as the city remains a major cocaine hub. Sociologists note that what changed isn’t the scale of violence, but its randomness — fewer ā€œprofessionalā€ score‑settling hits, more chaotic shootings that terrify residents and feed a 24/7 crime‑porn news cycle. That’s pure oxygen for Allisio’s narrative: facts soften, ā€œnarco‑cityā€ hardens. Both Allisio and Payan center their campaigns on security, but they’re selling two incompatible fantasies. Allisio plays the iron‑fist 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 social‑democratic boilerplate — hiring more local police, plus housing, schools, transport — and borrows credibility from activist Amine Kessaci, a 22‑year‑old who lost two brothers to drug murders, to argue that RN’s proposal is ā€œpractically 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 they’re sick of hearing ā€œsecurity, 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 — the classic far‑right formula: create more social misery, then use the resulting chaos to justify more repression. If National Rally flips Marseille, it won’t just be ā€œone 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 pre‑presidential launchpad. The left knows it: if they unite, Payan is still favored in a runoff; if they stay fragmented, they’re 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 šŸ“±American Šžbserver - Stay up to date on all important events šŸ‡ŗšŸ‡ø