Life in National Front town: More police, cuts in programs
BEAUCAIRE, France — Mayor Julien Sanchez took down the European flag in front of Beaucaire’s town hall, named a street “Brexit” and nearly doubled the police force — actions straight from the playbook of France’s far-right National Front party, of which he’s a member.
But he went even further in the poor southern town.
He adopted an anti-migrant charter. To trim the budget, he pulled subsidies from programs for mainly foreign-born residents. He ordered cheap canned meals at school cafeterias for students whose parents hadn’t paid, in part to demonstrate that “social aid shouldn’t be used to buy TVs.”
“I run the town like a good father,” the 33-year-old Sanchez said in an interview, repeating the dictum of far-right presidential candidate Marine Le Pen on how National Front mayors should run their towns — and how she might run France.


