海角大神

海角大神 / Text

In a resurgent French town, a moderate right-wing voice

The winner of Sunday's mayoral election, Mayor Alain Jupp茅, a former prime minister, inspires optimism among voters at a time when far-right parties are ascendant in France.

By Sara Miller Llana, Staff writer
Bordeaux, France

To outsiders, Bordeaux is synonymous with wine. But here in France, the city is a study in urban transformation.

On a weekend visit, I asked locals for recommendations of where to experience the 鈥渧ibe鈥 of a place that鈥檚 recently gone from a sleepy provincial town to a resurgent tourist hub. The city鈥檚 transformation is largely the achievement of Mayor Alain Jupp茅, who cleaned up the 18th-century facades, renovated the waterfront, and installed a slick tram system across the city. Mr. Jupp茅, a former prime minister of France, has been the city鈥檚 head since 1995, and was reelected Sunday to his fourth term in office 鈥撀爏ealing his image as one of the leading figures of the French center-right. 聽

The locals directed me to the March茅 des Capucins, the city鈥檚 largest food market, and my eye immediately went to the heaping platters of oysters, shrimp, crab legs, and sea snails at a restaurant called 鈥淐hez Jean-Mi.鈥

It was a long wait, but I was finally seated next to a boisterous table of 20. And that鈥檚 when I realized that the recommendation could not have been more spot-on: That party included Jupp茅 himself, enjoying a聽Saturday聽lunch the day before local elections.

As I cracked crabs鈥 legs and scooped up raw oysters, I asked our young waiter in what ways Bordeaux was changing. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a completely different city than when I was growing up,鈥 he said. 鈥淣ow tourists come here to see the city, to see even this place [the market].鈥

As Jupp茅 stood up, I managed to pull myself away from my lunch 鈥 incidentally the best seafood I鈥檝e had in at least a decade 鈥 to introduce myself. A local woman also walked up to berate him for the lack of parking on Bordeaux streets. But most residents give the mayor credit for modernizing the city and putting it back on the tourist map, which he said is part of his vision for the future of Bordeaux. 鈥淚 will continue to keep doing this,鈥 he said.

As the following day's municipal elections showed, most locals believe him. Jupp茅 won by a significant margin in the election鈥檚 first round, with 60 percent of the vote. His reelection was a welcome victory for his center-right political party, the UMP, at a time when its far-right political competitor is quickly gaining ground.

And even as the French public opinion polls register increasing pessimism across the country, Bordeaux is experiencing a wave of optimism that helped give Jupp茅 such a clear mandate.

Elsewhere in France, advances made by the far-right National Front (FN), led by Marine Le Pen, became the dominant theme of the elections鈥 first round. Compared to the UMP and the Socialists, the FN has just a fraction of representation in France鈥檚聽36,000 municipalities,聽but the party fared substantially better than expected on Sunday. Ms. Le Pen joyously declared 鈥渢he聽end of the bipolarization of the political scene鈥 after yesterday鈥檚 results.

The clear victory of Jupp茅, of course, will do nothing to assuage concerns of the ruling Socialists, who lost significant ground and did worse than expected in the most important race of the day, Paris. Overall, the UMP captured about 47 percent of all local votes combined, according to local media tallies,聽while the Socialists won about 38 percent. (The FN took about 5 percent of the vote nationwide.) Official results will be out later today or聽tomorrow.

French voters will once again head to the polls聽next Sunday, for the second round of municipal elections in places where no candidate mustered 50 percent of the vote 鈥 but not in Bordeaux. If next Sunday is anything like the last, Bordeaux residents will be out strolling along the waterfront and eating oysters at the聽Sunday聽market, knowing who will be their mayor.

Or they might be thinking about a more momentous future race. Jupp茅 is considered a possible contender for the national leadership of the UMP聽ahead of France's 2017 presidential elections.聽