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The Olympics are over. Should the Eiffel Tower keep wearing the rings?

Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo is making a last-ditch effort to keep the city’s Olympic flame alive. Ms. Hidalgo wants the Olympic rings, which were so perfectly placed just above the arch of the Eiffel Tower for the duration of the Games, to be mounted there indefinitely.

But while those colorful, interlocking rings perched on the wrought-iron lattice of the tower were, admittedly, a photographer’s dream, Parisians are shouting, “Sacré bleu!”

Why We Wrote This

The Paris Olympics are over, but many in the city are still basking in the glow – including the mayor, who now wants to keep the Olympic rings mounted on the Eiffel Tower indefinitely. Do Parisians want to bask that much?

More than 42,000 people have signed a petition against keeping the rings up. For many, the problem is likely the source of the idea. Ms. Hidalgo is one of the most unpopular politicians in recent memory.

And before she can make any headway, she’ll have to get past a few roadblocks.

The family of Gustave Eiffel – the man who designed the Eiffel Tower for the 1889 world’s fair – is not having any of this Olympic rings business. In a statement, the family’s organization said that keeping the rings in place would go against “the neutrality and meaning acquired over the years by the Eiffel Tower.”

And Ms. Hidalgo’s “decision goes against national heritage laws, which prohibit any form of publicity on historical monuments,” says sociologist Nathalie Heinich. “Most likely, nothing will come of it.”

Let’s just come out and say it: The Olympic Games in Paris were a success.

Yes, there was a fair amount of local pre-Olympic grumbling, but that is to be expected. This is France, and complaining is practically a national sport. But if you take any average French person aside, away from friends and family (so as not to bring shame on the nation), they may just admit two things: One, they watched the Olympic Games. And two, they had a ton of fun doing so.

Now, as the Olympic cauldron at the Tuileries Gardens goes dim, Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo is making a last-ditch effort to keep the Olympic flame alive. She wants to keep the Olympic rings, which were so perfectly placed just above the arch of the Tour Eiffel for the duration of the Games, mounted there indefinitely.

Why We Wrote This

The Paris Olympics are over, but many in the city are still basking in the glow – including the mayor, who now wants to keep the Olympic rings mounted on the Eiffel Tower indefinitely. Do Parisians want to bask that much?

But while those colorful, interlocking rings perched on the wrought-iron lattice of the tower were, admittedly, a photographer’s dream – especially at sunset with the beach volleyball court splayed out before it – Parisians are shouting, “Sacré bleu!”

The mayor and the Games

More than 42,000 people have signed a petition against keeping the rings up. For many, the problem with the idea is likely its source: Ms. Hidalgo.

Despite being well into her second mandate, she is one of the most unpopular politicians in recent memory. Her attempts to ban cars from the city center and her inability to clean up Paris have given her an approval rating of 19%. Ms. Hidalgo made her decision about the rings unilaterally, without public participation, which has ruffled more than a few feathers.

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