The project for the Paris club’s future stadium has now moved beyond the purely sporting sphere and has become a major political issue ahead of the municipal elections. Selling the current venue, staying within the city, or building a new site on the outskirts has turned into a central topic of public debate.
Several candidates have expressed support for reopening talks with the club in order to reach a long-term solution. Some say they are ready to negotiate a sale or a new operating agreement, with the aim of developing a sports and cultural hub around the stadium that is open to the public. This approach contrasts with the line defended so far by the current municipal leadership.
Stadium Future Turns Into Political Issue
Other political leaders are also calling for renewed dialogue to prevent the club from leaving the capital, arguing that such a scenario would send a negative signal in terms of attractiveness and sporting influence.
PSG insists that its priority is a move to Massy or Poissy. For now, the club is focusing on studies conducted on several alternative sites outside the city. Technical and financial assessments are continuing with the support of local partners and currently represent the main priority.
A club representative said the scale and complexity of the project to give the stadium a new dimension require a stable institutional framework and a serious, methodical timetable. Significant resources have already been committed with local partners to study the Massy and Poissy options, and these evaluations are continuing rigorously. The stadium file has therefore become a full-fledged election issue, while the club continues to advance its own plans, and the vote’s outcome could restart or completely reshape negotiations.
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