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Tag: Emmanuel Macron

  • Read Emmanuel Macron’s Heartfelt Tribute to Pharrell Williams

    He looked back at every highlight of Pharrell’s career, from the Neptunes to hits produced for Jay-Z and Britney Spears, including, of course, the hit song “Happy,” which elevated the singer to international stardom. “The irresistible lyrics of this soundtrack, composed for Despicable Me, a movie made from a French studio, travelled far beyond cinema screens,” Macron said. “Its rhythm spread and you became the man who made the world dance in unison.”

    “But Pharrell,” he continued, “with you, creation is never confined to a single art.”

    On February 4, 2023, fashion house Louis Vuitton shook up the fashion world with the announcement that Pharrell was to become artistic director of its men’s collections.

    Vuitton selected Pharrell “for your irreverence, your boundless creativity, and your total commitment. And from the very first year, you delivered with a spectacular debut collection, unveiled during a landmark show on the Pont Neuf, transformed for the occasion into a golden stage,” Macron said. “The world discovered the silhouettes you had imagined: the Louis Vuitton Damier reinterpreted as bold pixelated camouflage, boldly paired with denim, tailoring, or with unexpected hats and accessories.”

    It was, Macron said, “a manifesto show, in your own image, expressing a vision of masculinity liberated from clichés. And you went even further at UNESCO in 2024, where your new collection carried a universal message—a call for unity among humankind, beneath the United Nations flags at the Place de Fontenoy.”

    The tribute was also an opportunity to talk about Pharrell’s connection with contemporary art, into which he continues to infuse historical references, pop culture, and a sense of performance: “Moving from musician to exhibition curator might have made others hesitate. But not you. You didn’t shy away from experimenting—not even when it meant being cast in a mold, remaining immobile for hours, breathing through a straw, so that Daniel Arsham could create a sculpture in your likeness. After all, you always sought to learn from the very best, and to create alongside them.”

    Macron, who recalled Williams’ participation in the Pièces Jaunes concert with his wife Brigitte Macron, didn’t shy away from commenting on the rigorous lifestyle and discipline of the artist.

    “Dear Pharrell, listing all your achievements would be impossible: you have the rare ability to live a thousand passions within a single lifetime,” he said. “You managed to do so because you are incredibly talented, but also thanks to your steadfast discipline that could intimidate even an Olympic athlete. A five a.m. wake-up call. Five hundred sit-ups. Meditation. A hot bath, a cold shower—and sometimes even a burst of songwriting in the bathroom itself.”

    Beyond routine, however, is something less tangible, he said. “Behind the brilliance of your success lies this daily rigor. But also a guiding principle to which you remain deeply faithful: gratitude. Gratitude for the journey that brought you here, allowing you, despite worldwide recognition, to remain the humble, witty, and deeply human creator so admired by your teams.”

    Originally published in Vanity Fair France.

    Valentine Ulgu-Servant

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  • Trump to address Davos World Economic Forum as America’s allies push back against his bid to take Greenland

    “We are in the midst of a rupture, not a transition,” Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said in his speech at Davos on Monday. “Great powers have begun using economic integration as weapons, tariffs as leverage, financial infrastructure as coercion, supply chains as vulnerabilities to be exploited.”

    “You cannot live within the lie of mutual benefit through integration, when integration becomes the source of your subordination,” Carney said, making a case for “middle powers” like Canada to work together to gain leverage against “great powers,” which he said have the luxury of going it alone.

    “When we only negotiate bilaterally with a hegemon, we negotiate from weakness. We accept what’s offered. We compete with each other to be the most accommodating,” Carney said. “This is not sovereignty. It’s the performance of sovereignty while accepting subordination. In a world of great power rivalry, the countries in between have a choice — compete with each other for favor, or to combine to create a third path with impact.”

    Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney delivers a speech at the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting held in Davos, Switzerland, Jan. 20, 2026.

    Harun Ozalp/Anadolu/Getty


    He called other nations to join Canada to pursue shared values, supporting Ukraine, NATO, and Danish and Greenlandic sovereignty, and warned them to “stop invoking rules-based international order as though it still functions as advertised. Call it what it is — a system of intensifying great power rivalry, where the most powerful pursue their interests, using economic integration as coercion.”

    “The powerful have their power,” Carney said. “But we have something too — the capacity to stop pretending, to name reality, to build our strength at home and to act together. That is Canada’s path. We choose it openly and confidently, and it is a path wide open to any country willing to take it with us.”

    His remarks drew a standing ovation.

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  • Trump Leaks World Leaders’ Private Texts in Greenland Bullying Fit

    Photo: Michael Kappeler/Picture Alliance/Getty Images

    While it’s cliché to call Donald Trump’s behavior childish, there’s really no other way to characterize his demand to take Greenland. Polls show that Greenlanders don’t want to be part of the U.S., and Americans’ support for forcibly taking the Arctic island is in the single digits. While Greenland is important for strategic and defense reasons, experts say Trump could get pretty much everything he wants there if he just asks nicely. But Trump keeps insisting he has to have Greenland, and he has to have it now.

    Now the president is using increasingly immature tactics in his quest to obtain the Arctic island, pouting about how he was robbed of a Nobel Peace Prize and publicly sharing world leaders’ private text messages about Greenland on Truth Social.

    Trump kicked off the long MLK Day weekend by inviting countries to join a new “Board of Peace,” which he will chair. It appears he’s envisioning an American-dominated alternative United Nations with a $1 billion admission fee. Then, in a lengthy Truth Social post on Saturday, Trump announced he will impose tariffs on several nations if they don’t let the U.S. purchase Greenland:

    Starting on February 1st, 2026, all of the above mentioned Countries (Denmark, Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, The United Kingdom, The Netherlands, and Finland), will be charged a 10% Tariff on any and all goods sent to the United States of America. On June 1st, 2026, the Tariff will be increased to 25%. This Tariff will be due and payable until such time as a Deal is reached for the Complete and Total purchase of Greenland.

    A day later, Trump’s text-based behind-the-scenes tantrum-ing spilled into public. In a Sunday message to Jonas Gahr Støre, the prime minister of Norway, Trump said he’s demanding Greenland because he didn’t win the Nobel Peace Prize.

    “Considering your Country decided not to give me the Nobel Peace Prize for having stopped 8 Wars PLUS, I no longer feel an obligation to think purely of Peace, although it will always be predominant, but can now think about what is good and proper for the United States of America,” Trump wrote. He went on to question Denmark’s claim to Greenland.

    Støre said in a statement that he has repeatedly explained to Trump that — as everyone else is well aware — Norway has nothing to do with who gets the Nobel as “it is an independent Nobel Committee, and not the Norwegian government, that awards the prize.”

    Nevertheless, it seems Team Trump thought this error-ridden text was smart messaging. The Atlantic noted, “The text was forwarded by the White House National Security Council to ambassadors in Washington, and was clearly intended to be widely shared.”

    So it does not seem that Trump’s next unhinged move was an act of retaliation for his message being shared publicly. While traveling to Davos, Switzerland, for the World Economic Forum early on Tuesday morning, Trump posted what France later confirmed was a private text from French president Emmanuel Macron:

    A day earlier, Trump had publicly threatened France with a 200 percent tariff on wines and Champagnes following reports that Macron would refuse to join the Board of Peace. It seems Macron was attempting to smooth things over by reminding his “friend” Trump of their agreement on other foreign-policy issues and offering to set up a Thursday G7 meeting in Paris, along with a private dinner, to hash out the Greenland issue.

    Attempting to humiliate foes by sharing their private messages is a common Trump tactic (it was actually the premise for one of his coffee-table books). But this is the first time he has posted private messages from a foreign leader, aside from a fawning text NATO chief Mark Rutte sent him last summer.

    Trump continued his Truth Social taunting by posting altered images that showed him taking over Greenland (along with Venezuela and Canada):

    Next, Trump lashed out at the U.K. for giving away the island of Diego Garcia, arguing that it’s yet another reason why the U.S. must take Greenland:

    Then Trump shared a private message in which Rutte praised him and promised to hype his foreign-policy achievements in Davos:

    Trump told the New York Post that he shared the messages because they show European leaders are behaving differently toward him behind the scenes as they publicly issue warnings about Greenland.

    “It just made my point. They’re saying, ‘Oh gee, let’s have dinner, let’s do this, let’s do that.’ It just made my point,” he said.

    Both Macron and the White House confirmed on Tuesday that the proposed G7 meeting in Paris isn’t happening, as AFP reports:

    ‘No meeting is scheduled. The French presidency is willing to hold one,’ Macron told AFP in brief remarks after he delivered a speech to the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

    … A White House official told AFP that Trump has ‘no plans to travel to Paris at this time’. The US president is set to arrive in Davos on Wednesday and leave on Thursday.

    So what’s next for Greenland? For now, it seems we’re all being held hostage, at the whim of a leader who’d rather bully allies via threats and nasty online posts than sit down to find a reasonable way to get what he wants.

    This post was updated to include Trump’s remarks to the Post.


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    Margaret Hartmann

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  • 10 convicted of cyberbullying French first lady Brigitte Macron

    A Paris court found Monday 10 people guilty of cyberbullying France’s first lady Brigitte Macron by spreading false online claims about her gender and sexuality, including allegations she was born a man.

    The court handed out sentences to all the defendants ranging from a cyberbullying awareness training to 8-month suspended prison sentences.

    The court pointed to “particularly degrading, insulting, and malicious” comments referring to false claims regarding alleged trans identity and alleged pedo criminality targeting Brigitte Macron.

    French President Emmanuel Macron and his wife Brigitte Macron in Paris on Dec. 8, 2025.

    Anne-Christine POUJOULAT / AFP via Getty Images


    The defendants, eight men and two women aged 41 to 65, were accused of posting “numerous malicious comments” falsely claiming that President Emmanuel Macron ‘s wife was born a man and linking the 24-year age gap with her husband to pedophilia. Some of the posts were viewed tens of thousands of times.

    Brigitte Macron didn’t attend the two-day trial in October. Speaking on TF1 national television Sunday, she said she launched legal proceedings to “set an example” in the fight against harassment.

    Her daughter, Tiphaine Auzière, testified about what she described as the “deterioration” of her mother’s life since the online harassment intensified. “She cannot ignore the horrible things said about her,” Auzière told the court. She said the impact has extended to the entire family, including Macron’s grandchildren.

    Defendant Delphine Jegousse, 51, who is known as Amandine Roy and describes herself as a medium and author, is considered to have played a major role in spreading the rumor after she released a four-hour video on her YouTube channel in 2021.

    The X account of Aurélien Poirson-Atlan, 41, known as Zoé Sagan on social media, was suspended in 2024 after his name was cited in several judicial investigations.

    Other defendants include an elected official, a teacher and a computer scientist. Several told the court their comments were intended as humor or satire and said they didn’t understand why they were being prosecuted.

    The case follows years of conspiracy theories falsely alleging that Brigitte Macron was born under the name Jean-Michel Trogneux, which is actually the name of her brother. The Macrons have also filed a defamation suit in the United States against conservative influencer Candace Owens.

    The Macrons, who have been married since 2007, first met at the high school where he was a student and she was a teacher. Brigitte Macron, 24 years her husband’s senior, was then called Brigitte Auzière, a married mother of three.

    Emmanuel Macron, 48, has been France’s president since 2017.

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  • AP mapping shows France’s poorest regions backing Le Pen’s party as support for Macron wanes

    PARIS (AP) — The date was May 7, 2017. Addressing cheering supporters, the newly elected leader of France, Emmanuel Macron, made a promise that now, in his waning 18 months as president, lies in tatters.

    The rival that Macron defeated that day, Marine Le Pen, had secured 10,638,475 votes. They were nowhere near enough for the far-right leader to win. But they were too numerous for Macron to ignore, a best-ever watershed at the ballot box for Le Pen’s once-ostracized National Front party that she inherited from her Holocaust-denying father.

    Gazing out over a sea of French flags, Macron acknowledged “anger” and “distress” that he said motivated Le Pen voters. He pledged to do everything to win them over, “so they no longer have any reason to vote for the extremes.”

    But since then, Le Pen’s us-against-them nativist politics targeting immigrants, Muslims and the European Union have made millions more converts. Her National Rally party, rebranded in 2018 to broaden its appeal and shed its sulfurous links to her dad, Jean-Marie Le Pen, has become the largest in parliament and has never appeared closer to power, with the next presidential and legislative elections scheduled in 2027.

    Poverty worsened under Macron

    Many factors explain why Le Pen has gone from strength to strength. Some are intrinsic: The 57-year-old cat-loving mother of three is more polished and popular than her gruff ex-paratrooper father who had multiple convictions for inciting racial hatred and for downplaying Nazi atrocities in World War II. He died in January.

    Others are external and include voter disgruntlement over wealth inequality that has worsened significantly under Macron.

    An additional 1.2 million people have fallen below the poverty threshold in the world’s seventh-largest economy since the 2017 election and 2022 reelection of France’s pro-business president.

    The former investment banker slashed business taxes and watered down a wealth tax to boost France’s allure for investment. Left-wing critics labeled Macron “president of the rich.”

    The poverty rate was 13.8% when Macron took power and had barely shifted during the previous presidency of François Hollande, a Socialist.

    By 2023, into Macron’s second term and the most recent year with official data from the French national statistics agency, the poverty rate had ballooned to 15.4%, which is its highest level in nearly 30 years of measurements.

    The following year, National Rally triumphed in French voting for the European Parliament. So heavy was the defeat for his centrist camp that Macron stunned France by then dissolving the National Assembly.

    Again, National Rally surged in the ensuing legislative election. It didn’t come close to winning a majority — no party did. But with 123 of the 577 lawmakers, National Rally vaulted past all other parties and surpassed its previous best of 89 legislators elected in 2022.

    Put bluntly: the worse off France becomes, the better National Rally seems to fare.

    Showing the correlation

    Mapping by The Associated Press both of poverty in France and of the Le Pen vote in the four French legislative elections since she took over her father’s party in 2011 show how both have grown.

    The maps show particularly evident progress by National Rally in some of France’s poorest regions, especially in what have become National Rally strongholds: the deindustrialized northeast of France and along its Mediterranean coast.

    Region-by-region poverty rates were mapped through 2021, beyond which the national statistics agency INSEE doesn’t have data for all 96 of mainland France’s regions. The AP mapped support for the National Front and then National Rally by using the party’s showing in the first rounds of voting in legislative elections in 2012, 2017, 2022 and 2024.

    “We clearly see that the National Rally vote is very strongly correlated with issues of poverty, of difficulties with social mobility” and with voters “who are most pessimistic about the future of their children or their personal situation,” said Luc Rouban, a senior researcher at Paris’ elite Sciences Po school of political sciences who studies the party.

    François Ouzilleau, who stood for Macron’s party in the 2022 legislative election and lost to a National Rally winner in his district in Normandy west of Paris, puts it more simply.

    “It feeds off anger and people’s problems,” he said.

    Parallels with Trump are apparent

    But poverty is only part of the Le Pen success story and her appeal isn’t limited to voters who struggle to make ends meet. Combating immigration, the party’s bread and butter since its foundation, remains a central plank of Le Pen-ism.

    Rouban sees National Rally similarities with the playbook of U.S. President Donald Trump.

    “They’re doing Trump-ism à la française,” he said. “They say, ‘We’re wary of the justice system,’ like Trump. ‘We’re taking back control of our national borders,’ like Trump.”

    National Rally establishes strongholds

    The party says that its proposals to slash France’s spending on migrants and on the EU and to redirect money to people’s pockets by reducing the costs of energy and other necessities appeal to voters in financial need.

    “The French have clearly understood that the ones defending the purchasing power of the working and middle classes are the National Rally,” Laure Lavalette, a parliamentary spokesperson for the party, told the AP.

    Lavalette represents the southern Var region, one of National Rally’s new strongholds as Macron’s popularity has plummeted.

    In legislative elections that followed his election in 2017, Le Pen’s party failed to win any seats in Var. But after Macron’s reelection in 2022, National Rally grabbed seven of Var’s eight seats and repeated that feat in 2024.

    Poverty rates in the Var have long surpassed the national average, the AP’s mapping shows.

    Lavalette says that making ends meet is “crazy difficult” for some of her constituents and that “some tell me that they have to chose between eating or heating.”

    Voters hunger for change

    The 2024 legislative election produced a fractured parliament with fragile minority governments collapsing one after the other. To untangle that knot, Macron could have dissolved the National Assembly again this year, triggering a new election.

    That is what National Rally wanted, buoyed by polls suggesting it could perhaps win enough seats to form its first government.

    Mindful that such an outcome could saddle him with a National Rally prime minister for the remainder of his presidency, Macron held his fire.

    And for now at least, enough lawmakers have rallied around Macron’s prime minister, Sébastien Lecornu, to keep him afloat, mindful of the risk of losing their seats if Macron called voters back to the ballot boxes.

    “There’s a sword of Damocles hanging over us, it’s called the National Rally,” said Ouzilleau, who serves as mayor in the Normandy town of Vernon and is a long-time friend of Lecornu.

    He says voters have increasingly been telling him that they are ready to test-drive National Rally, breaking decades of uninterrupted rule by mainstream parties.

    “It’s been two or three years that we’ve been hearing this: ‘We’ve tried everything except the National Rally, so what is the risk?’” he said.

    ___

    William Jarrett reported from London.

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  • Europe Aimed to Set Standards for Tech Rules, Now It Wants to Roll Them Back

    BERLIN—Europe is moving to relax some of the world’s tightest digital regulations in a bid to boost growth and reduce its reliance on U.S. tech.

    Germany and France on Tuesday backed an effort by the European Union, long seen as a global rulesetter for technology, artificial intelligence and digital services, to loosen regulatory strictures on the fast-growing, U.S.-dominated sectors.

    Copyright ©2025 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

    Bertrand Benoit

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  • French relief as Algeria frees jailed novelist at centre of diplomatic crisis

    Almost a year to the day since French-Algerian writer Boualem Sansal was arrested on arrival at Algiers airport, the Algerian president has pardoned him and allowed him to leave the country.

    Sansal, 81, has been at the centre of a bitter diplomatic row between Paris and Algiers and President Abdelmadjid Tebboune’s decision came in response to a direct approach from German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier.

    The writer arrived in Germany on a military plane on Wednesday evening and was taken to hospital.

    French President Emmanuel Macron, who spoke to Sansal by phone, said France had used respect and calm to bring about his freedom.

    “I thank President Tebboune for this act of humanity,” said Macron.

    Although Paris had for months sought to lower tensions with Algeria, it was the German president’s role that secured Sansal’s release because of his good relations with Algeria’s leader.

    French ambassador Stéphane Romatet, who was recalled from Algiers earlier this year for consultations because of the row, told French radio on Thursday that the crisis in relations was so deep that “from the start we knew a happy outcome… would go through a trusted third party and the German solution quickly came forward”.

    Steinmeier said this week he had asked President Tebboune to pardon Sansal, “given his advanced age and fragile health”, so the writer could receive medical treatment in Germany.

    Tebboune said on Wednesday he had decided to respond favourably to Steinmeier’s request “because of its nature and humanitarian motives”.

    Sansal is being treated for prostate cancer.

    He was given a five-year jail sentence in July for undermining national unity with remarks that questioned Algeria’s borders.

    The novelist has long been a critic of Algeria’s government, which had not responded favourably to France’s appeal for clemency.

    Relations had already been on the slide after President Macron announced France was recognising Moroccan sovereignty of Western Sahara and backed a plan for limited autonomy for the disputed territory.

    Algeria backs the pro-independence Polisario Front in Western Sahara and is seen as its main ally.

    The spat worsened in April when Algeria expressed outrage after one of its consular staff in France was arrested over the kidnapping of a government critic in Paris.

    The crisis between the two countries was seen as unprecedented in more than 60 years since Algeria secured independence from France in 1962.

    Some French commentators and political figures blamed what was seen as a confrontational stance to Algeria taken by right-wing former Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau and others on the right of French politics.

    Algerian minister Sofiane Chaib also blamed Retailleau earlier this year for the “fabricated spat”.

    Then at the end of last month a motion by France’s National Rally was narrowly passed by MPs opposing a 1968 Franco-Algerian migration accord that granted residency rights to Algerians.

    Although the move was seen as a potential setback, the decision to replace Retailleau with Laurent Nuñez as interior minister appeared to signal a new mood.

    “He has completely changed the way relations with [Algeria] are handled”, ex-diplomat Jean-Christophe Ruffin told French radio.

    Retailleau responded to Sansal’s release on Wednesday speaking of “immense relief and great joy”.

    Tensions between the two countries remain, though, after French sportswriter Christophe Gleizes was jailed for seven years in July for allegedly trying to interview a member of a movement designed by Algeria as a terrorist group.

    French Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot praised diplomats for their work in securing Sansal’s release, and said they remained focused on Gleizes, “whose imminent release we are hoping for”.

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  • Macron and Abbas plan committee towards Palestinian state

    France and the Palestinian Authority plan to establish a joint committee to work on the consolidation of a future Palestinian state.

    “This committee will deal with all legal, constitutional, institutional and organizational aspects,” French President Emmanuel Macron said on Tuesday after talks with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in Paris.

    The committee is also expected to contribute to drafting a new constitution.

    Abbas expressed full support for the creation of the constitutional committee and reiterated his call for Palestinian transitional institutions in the Gaza Strip to maintain links with the Palestinian Authority.

    Meanwhile, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio recently noted that it remains unclear whether the Palestinian Authority, which administers parts of the West Bank, would have a role in the Gaza Strip in the future.

    Israel has historically opposed such arrangements.

    The Palestinian militant Hamas group, which has governed the Gaza Strip since 2007, has also opposed Palestinian Authority control in the territory.

    French President Emmanuel Macron welcomes President of the Palestinian National Authority Mahmoud Abbas ahead of their meeting at the Elysee presidential palace. Julien Mattia/Le Pictorium via ZUMA Press/dpa

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  • Trial to begin for ten accused of sexist cyber-bullying of Brigitte Macron

    Ten people accused of sexist cyber-bullying of the French president’s wife, Brigitte Macron, are due to go on trial this week in Paris.

    The defendants are accused of spreading unsubstantiated claims over her gender and sexuality, as well as making “malicious remarks” about the 24-year age gap between Brigitte and her husband, Emmanuel Macron.

    If found guilty, the defendants face up to two years’ imprisonment.

    Among the ten people due to appear in the dock on Monday and Tuesday are an elected official, a gallery owner and a teacher, according to French media.

    Two of them – self-styled independent journalist Natacha Rey and internet fortune-teller Amandine Roy – were found guilty of slander last year for claiming that France’s first lady had never existed, and that her brother Jean-Michel Trogneux had changed gender and started using her name.

    But a court of appeals later acquitted Rey and Roy on the grounds that their statements did not constitute defamation. Mrs Macron and her brother are appealing the decision.

    A conspiracy theory centred around the notion that Brigitte Macron is a transgender woman has been swirling since her husband won a first term in office in 2017.

    The unsubstantiated claims over Mrs Macron’s gender have been gaining ground in the US, mostly promoted by right-wing influencer Candace Owens.

    Last July the Macrons filed a lawsuit against Owens, alleging that she “disregarded all credible evidence disproving her claim in favour of platforming known conspiracy theorists and proven defamers”.

    Speaking to the BBC’s Fame Under Fire podcast, the Macrons’ lawyer in the case, Tom Clare, said that Brigitte Macron had found the claims “incredibly upsetting” and they were a “distraction” to the French president.

    “It is incredibly upsetting to think that you have to go and subject yourself, to put this type of proof forward,” he said.

    Emmanuel Macron has said pursuing legal action against Owens was about “defending his honour” and that the influencer had peddled false information “with the aim of causing harm, in the service of an ideology and with established connections to far-right leaders.”

    Mrs Macron first met her now-husband when she was a teacher at his secondary school.

    The couple ended up marrying in 2007, when Mr Macron was 29 and Mrs Macron was 54.

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  • Tensions remain high as China and EU prepare Brussels meeting on rare earths

    A planned meeting between EU Trade Commissioner Maros Šefčovič and his Chinese counterpart was cancelled on Friday, as the European Commission opted for expert-level talks to defuse tensions over Beijing’s rare-earth export controls, which EU leaders are calling economic coercion.

    The get-together will be held both online and in person in Brussels, as the Commission has been under pressure since Thursday night from the 27 member states, who have called on it to work on a strong response to the unfair trade practices of international partners — first and foremost, China.

    The announcement comes right after a trip to Beijing by German foreign minister Johann Wadephul was also cancelled, as a spokesperson for his ministry said on Friday, without specifying whether it was China or Germany that called off the trip.

    Beijing is accused by its European counterparts of weaponising rare earth exports, for which it has imposed a Kafkaesque licensing regime since 9 October.

    These minerals are key for EU industries, such as the automotive, defence, Greentech and digital sectors.

    “It is economic coercion,” French President Emmanuel Macron said Thursday after a European summit, but without specifically recommending the use of what is considered a trade defence “nuclear option,” the “Anti-Coercion Instrument”.

    In response to Chinese trade threats, Europeans adopted in 2023 a toolkit to counter third-country state pressure through measures such as tariffs or restrictions on access to public procurement, licenses, or intellectual property rights.

    To trigger it, a qualified majority of the 27 member states is required, which is not guaranteed given their differing views.

    Pressure from the EU’s 27 members

    “We talked about the anti-coercion Instrument, but we did not make any decision,” German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said after the summit.

    Not all member states defend the same interests vis-à-vis the Asian giant, given their economic ties with Beijing.

    Under pressure from France, however, the 27 leaders agreed in their conclusions of the EU summit on the need for the Commission “to make effective use of all EU economic instruments” to deter or counter external threats.

    Related

    Because the China issue continues to grow for the EU, Macron pointed to “a Chinese economy that invests heavily, following a logic of dumping.”

    Dumping allows China to sell its products cheaply on the European market than on its domestic one.

    Europeans, particularly in the steel sector, are experiencing this as they contend with China’s production surplus.

    Facing US tariffs, Beijing also redirect its exports toward the European market, Macron said, putting additional pressure on the EU.

    “Investigations need to be launched to look into this, and a much more systematic approach to economic security is required,” the French president added.

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  • Macron: Louvre theft an attack on France’s heritage

    French President Emmanuel Macron on Sunday denounced the spectacular theft of jewellery from the Louvre Museum in Paris as an attack on France’s cultural history.

    “The theft from the Louvre is an attack on a cultural asset that we value because it is part of our history,” said Macron. “We will recover the works and bring the perpetrators to justice. Under the leadership of the Paris public prosecutor’s office, everything is being done everywhere to achieve this.”

    Macron said that a project to modernize the Louvre that was presented in January provides for a strengthening of security measures.

    “It will ensure the preservation and protection of what makes up our memory and our culture,” said the president.

    Broadcaster BFMTV has released extracts from an amateur video showing the burglars carrying out their spectacular coup in the exhibition room containing the French crown jewels.

    One of the perpetrators can be seen wearing a high-visibility waistcoat and forcibly opening one of the display cases.

    Public prosecutor Laure Beccau told broadcaster BFMTV that eight precious pieces of jewellery were taken. They included a necklace and an earring belonging to Empress Marie-Louise, Napoleon’s second wife.

    Another necklace, a pair of earrings and a diadem from the collections of Queen Marie-Amélie and Queen Hortense were also stolen, along with two brooches and a diadem belonging to Empress Eugénie, the wife of Napoleon III.

    Eugénie’s crown, a priceless item decorated with emeralds and hundreds of diamonds, was lost by the thieves during the heist and later recovered. The crown was reportedly damaged.

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  • Opinion | The Crisis in Paris Is That No One Recognizes the Real Crisis

    France’s welfare state is in desperate need of reform, but Macron is obsessing over Marine Le Pen.

    Joseph C. Sternberg

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  • France’s Lecornu likely to survive no-confidence votes in parliament

    French Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu faces two no-confidence motions in parliament on Thursday, although his chance of being ousted are seen as slim.

    Lecornu on Tuesday announced the suspension of an unpopular pension reform that raised the retirement age from 62 to 64, a signature policy measure of President Emmanuel Macron’s second term.

    The concession secured Lecornu support from the Socialists, who had demanded the pause as a condition for tolerating the fragile centre-right government.

    But lawmakers in France are not bound by party-line voting, making the outcome of the no-confidence motions tabled by left-wing and far-right parties far from certain.

    If Lecornu survives the vote, his government can press ahead with the difficult task of trying to get next year’s budget passed, which includes huge spending cuts and tax measures.

    A defeat would likely trigger the dissolution of parliament and fresh elections, as it is considered unlikely that Macron would again appoint a new prime minister to form a government.

    Since the snap parliamentary election called by Macron in mid-2024, the National Assembly has been split into several political blocs, none of which commands a governing majority or can form a stable coalition. Lecornu’s Cabinet is already the fourth government since that vote.

    The country’s high public debt has underscored the need for cross-party agreement on spending cuts, but deep party divisions have soured the public mood and increased political instability.

    Lecornu’s two immediate predecessors – Michel Barnier and François Bayrou – both lost confidence votes as they tried to push through unpopular austerity measures in the eurozone’s second-biggest economy.

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  • New French Cabinet named as Lecornu seeks to ease political turmoil

    France’s recently reappointed Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu unveiled a new Cabinet on Sunday evening, the Élysée Palace announced, as he faces mounting pressure to stabilize the government and push through a crucial budget.

    Several key Cabinet portfolios remain in the hands of the incumbents.

    Lecornu has kept Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot, Justice Minister Gérald Darmanin and the new Economy and Finance Minister Roland Lescure, who was only appointed a week ago, in office.

    Former labour minister Catherine Vautrin will become defence minister, a post previously held by Lecornu.

    Paris police prefect Laurent Nuñez will become the new interior minister.

    The task of forming a new government in France has been facing renewed pressure as President Emmanuel Macron prepares to attend the Gaza summit in Egypt on Monday, making him absent at a crucial time.

    Lecornu, who got his job back on Friday a few days after resigning, needed to form a new Cabinet by Monday so that the 2026 budget can be presented after a Cabinet meeting on the same day.

    If this deadline is missed, France could enter the new year without an approved budget, further burdening its already strained public finances.

    Several opposition parties have already announced plans to table a motion of no confidence, even before new government was named, while others say their decision will depend on whether Lecornu promises a change in political direction.

    Whether the prime minister can survive the challenge remains uncertain. A confidence vote could take place as early as Thursday.

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  • France’s Lecornu explains surprise reappointment as prime minister

    French Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu on Saturday explained his surprise reappointment by French President Emmanuel Macron, just days after he announced his resignation.

    Lecornu, a close ally of Macron, took office as prime minister just four weeks ago but resigned on Monday amid government tensions, plunging France into a further political crisis.

    But his return was confirmed on Friday after he was tasked by Macron with holding last-ditch talks with political opponents to find a path forward after months of instability in Paris.

    Under the French constitution, a new budget for the coming year must be submitted to parliament by a prime minister by Monday at the latest.

    “I have no other ambition than to get us out of this situation, which is objectively very difficult for everyone,” said Lecornu in the Paris suburb of L’Haÿ-les-Roses on Saturday.

    “So I give myself a pretty clear task,” he said, referring to the budget deadline. “And then either the political forces help me with it and we work together – or they don’t.”

    France has been mired in political deadlock since a snap election in mid-2024, which left no camp with a majority.

    While a left-wing alliance emerged with the most seats, Macron has steadfastly refused to work with the left, nominating a series of centrist and conservative prime ministers that have proven unable to build parliamentary majorities.

    Lecornu must now put together a Cabinet quickly over the weekend and has hinted that he could turn to the left.

    “I think we need a government that also reflects parliamentary reality. That is essential, that is democracy.”

    The government is already facing a vote of no confidence from the opposition at the beginning of the week. This means that Lecornu and his future government team could be toppled as soon as Thursday.

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  • France’s Macron reappoints Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu days after he quit

    French President Emmanuel Macron on Friday reappointed Sébastien Lecornu as prime minister, just days after his resignation, asking him to try again to form a government and produce a budget in a bid to end the country’s political deadlock. 

    Lecornu’s reappointment followed days of intense negotiations and came less than a week after he resigned amid infighting in his freshly named government. France is struggling with mounting economic challenges and ballooning debt, and the political crisis is aggravating its troubles and raising alarm across the European Union.

    The appointment is widely seen as Macron’s last chance to reinvigorate his second term, which runs until 2027. Lacking a majority in the National Assembly to push through his agenda, Macron faces mounting criticism — including from within his own ranks — and has little room to maneuver.

    Macron’s office released a one-sentence statement late Friday night announcing the appointment, one month after the statement issued a month ago when Lecornu was initially named and four days after he resigned.

    Lecornu said in a statement on social networks that he accepted the new job offer out of “duty.” He said he was given a mission “to do everything to give France a budget by the end of the year and respond to the daily problems of our compatriots.”

    All those who join his new government will have to renounce ambitions to run for president in 2027, Lecornu said, adding that the new Cabinet will “incarnate renewal and a diversity of skills.”

    “We must put an end to this political crisis that exasperates the French, and to this bad instability for France’s image and its interests,” he wrote.

    Lecornu abruptly resigned on Monday, only hours after unveiling a new Cabinet that drew opposition from a key coalition partner. The shock resignation prompted calls for Macron to step down or dissolve parliament again, as he did in June 2024. But they remained unanswered, with the president instead announcing on Wednesday that he would name a successor to Lecornu within 48 hours.

    Political party leaders met for more than two hours on Friday with Macron, at his request. Some cautioned that another prime minister picked from the ranks of Macron’s fragile centrist camp would risk being disavowed by Parliament’s powerful lower house, prolonging the crisis.

    “How can one expect that all this will end well?” said Marine Tondelier, leader of The Ecologists party. “The impression we get is that the more alone he is, the more rigid he becomes.”

    Over the past year, Macron’s successive minority governments have collapsed in quick succession, leaving the European Union’s second-largest economy mired in political paralysis as France is faced with a debt crisis. At the end of the first quarter of 2025, France’s public debt stood at 3.346 trillion euros ($3.9 trillion), or 114% of gross domestic product. 

    France’s poverty rate also reached 15.4% in 2023, its highest level since records began in 1996, according to the latest data available from the national statistics institute.

    The economic and political struggles are worrying financial markets, ratings agencies and the European Commission, which has been pushing France to comply with EU rules limiting debt.

    The two biggest opposition parties in the National Assembly — the far-right National Rally and the far-left France Unbowed party — weren’t invited to the discussions on Friday. The National Rally wants Macron to hold fresh legislative elections, and France Unbowed wants him to resign.

    Lecornu argued earlier this week that Macron’s centrist bloc, its allies and parts of the opposition could still clump together into a working government. “There’s a majority that can govern,” he said. “I feel that a path is still possible. It is difficult.”

    Lecornu will now have to seek compromises to avoid an immediate vote of no confidence and may even be forced to abandon an extremely unpopular pension reform that was one of Macron’s signature policies in his second presidential term. Rammed through parliament without a vote in 2023 despite mass protests, it gradually raises the retirement age from 62 to 64. Opposition parties want it to be scrapped.

    The political deadlock stems from Macron’s shock decision in June 2024 to dissolve the National Assembly. The snap elections produced a hung parliament, with no bloc able to command a majority in the 577-seat chamber. The gridlock has unnerved investors, infuriated voters, and stalled efforts to curb France’s spiraling deficit and public debt.

    Without stable support, Macron’s governments have stumbled from one crisis to the next, collapsing as they sought backing for unpopular spending cuts. Lecornu’s resignation, just 14 hours after announcing his Cabinet, underscored the fragility of the president’s coalition amid deep political and personal rivalries.

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  • Macron Reappoints Prime Minister Who Just Quit 

    PARIS—French President Emmanuel Macron has reappointed Sébastien Lecornu as prime minister, a post he quit less than a week ago, ratcheting up fears of continued political paralysis in France.

    In reinstating Lecornu, a close ally, Macron risks deepening the frustration of lawmakers in the fractious National Assembly, particularly leftist members who have demanded a break with the past.

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    Noemie Bisserbe

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  • France’s Macron to Name New PM, Shelving Threat of Snap Elections

    PARIS—President Emmanuel Macron is moving to name a new prime minister rather than calling snap elections, an approach that buys time for the country’s political establishment to pull France out of its fiscal disarray.

    Macron had been wielding the unspoken threat of dissolving the National Assembly and holding parliamentary elections after his latest prime minister, Sébastien Lecornu, abruptly resigned Monday amid bickering over his cabinet choices.

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    Stacy Meichtry

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  • An Isolated Macron Is Pushing the Limits of France’s Political System

    PARIS—French democracy wasn’t built for the crisis that’s enveloping the presidency of Emmanuel Macron.

    In an effort to pull France out of its fiscal spiral, Macron is exhausting a battery of tools available to him under the constitution as guarantor of France’s modern Fifth Republic. He dissolved a rowdy National Assembly last year only to see voters elect an even more divided lower house of parliament. Since then, he has appointed one prime minister after another, only to see them felled in confidence votes or resign.

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    Noemie Bisserbe

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  • Opinion | The World’s Worst Job Is in France

    Where do they think they are—Italy? France on Monday lost another Prime Minister—the fifth in two years—as Paris burns through senior political leaders at the pace you used to see in Rome. Don’t expect the revolving door to slow down any time soon.

    The latest victim of political dysfunction à la française is Sébastien Lecornu, who quit after less than a month as PM. He’d come into office promising a “profound break” with the gridlock of the recent past. Then this weekend he introduced a new cabinet stacked with politicians associated with unpopular President Emmanuel Macron. The backlash in the obstreperous legislature prompted his resignation a day later.

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    The Editorial Board

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