Newly elected mayor in Roubaix, David Guiraud (LFI) (Photo by Armand Gesquière / Hans Lucas via AFP)

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In France, left-wing city officials raise pay, right-wing ones cut it

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In Roubaix, the poorest city in France, where almost half the population lives below the poverty line (€1,288 per month), left-wing Mayor David Guiraud of La France Insoumise(LFI) held his first council meeting.

During a “heated discussion”, his majority approved an increase in elected officials’ pay. His own salary is now €4,875 per month, around €500 more than his right-wing predecessor. One of his “special advisers” even received a 138 per cent raise.

Overall, the budget was increased by 18 per cent. The opposition, though, saw its allowance cut in half. This drew criticism, with opponents denouncing a “special regime” and “partisan management of public funds” by the new majority.

The far-left mayor defended himself on X, arguing his pay is still below what is typical for a city of this size.

As for Paris and its huge debt of around €9.7 billion in 2026, Emmanuel Grégoire, the newly elected Socialist Party (PS) Mayor, has pledged to adopt a “different financial strategy” but he will still keep the same salary of around €7,782 per month. That had already been raised by 25 per cent under the previous administration..

Nice, on the other hand, is setting an example.

Right-wing Mayor Éric Ciotti of the Union of the Right for the Republic (UDR), announced yesterday at his council meeting a 30 per cent cut in all elected officials’ salaries in the Métropole Nice Côte d’Azur.

With a €2.5 billion debt, Ciotti hopes to save at least €700,000 annually. He also promised reductions in property taxes and waste management costs and advocates for “less taxes, fewer rules, and more freedom”.

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