LCANews
  • Home
  • Australia
    • News
    • CORONAVIRUS
    • BUSINESS
    • PORTRAITS
    • LIFE STYLE
      • Sydney
      • Melbourne
    • SPORT
    • DID YOU KNOW
    • CULTURE
    • Practice
      • BACKPACKERS
      • EDUCATION
      • JOB
  • EUROPE
    • FRANCE
    • Belgium
  • WORLD
    • PACIFIC
    • CANADA
    • CHINA
    • USA
  • Opinion
  • LEARN FRENCH
  • AWARDS
    • BELGIAN-AUSTRALIAN EXCELLENCE AWARDS
      • The 2026 nominees: Belgian-Australian Excellence Awards
    • FRENCH AUSTRALIAN AWARDS
      • 2025 French-Australian Excellence Awards
        • Our 2025 nominees: French-Australian Excellence Awards
        • 2025 French-Australian Excellence Awards: The finalists
        • 2025 French-Australian Excellence Awards: Ceremony details
      • 2024 French-Australian Excellence Awards
      • 2023 French-Australian Excellence Awards
        • The finalists / The nominees
      • 2022 French of The Year in Australia
        • The finalists / The nominees
  • EN
    • FR
    • ES
No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • Register
  • Home
  • Australia
    • News
    • CORONAVIRUS
    • BUSINESS
    • PORTRAITS
    • LIFE STYLE
      • Sydney
      • Melbourne
    • SPORT
    • DID YOU KNOW
    • CULTURE
    • Practice
      • BACKPACKERS
      • EDUCATION
      • JOB
  • EUROPE
    • FRANCE
    • Belgium
  • WORLD
    • PACIFIC
    • CANADA
    • CHINA
    • USA
  • Opinion
  • LEARN FRENCH
  • AWARDS
    • BELGIAN-AUSTRALIAN EXCELLENCE AWARDS
      • The 2026 nominees: Belgian-Australian Excellence Awards
    • FRENCH AUSTRALIAN AWARDS
      • 2025 French-Australian Excellence Awards
        • Our 2025 nominees: French-Australian Excellence Awards
        • 2025 French-Australian Excellence Awards: The finalists
        • 2025 French-Australian Excellence Awards: Ceremony details
      • 2024 French-Australian Excellence Awards
      • 2023 French-Australian Excellence Awards
        • The finalists / The nominees
      • 2022 French of The Year in Australia
        • The finalists / The nominees
  • EN
    • FR
    • ES
No Result
View All Result
LCANews
No Result
View All Result

Home » France » Macron, his team close ranks as ‘Benallagate’ scandal takes toll

Macron, his team close ranks as ‘Benallagate’ scandal takes toll

AFP AFP
July 25, 2018
Reading Time: 3 mins read
0
  • FR

French President Emmanuel Macron and his administration on Tuesday defended their handling of the scandal over violence by a top security aide, which has seen the approval ratings of France’s leader sink to a record low.

At a gathering of lawmakers from his Republic on the Move party, Macron said he was “in charge” and considered the actions of his now-fired aide Alexandre Benalla a “betrayal.”

“If they are looking for the person in charge, the only person, it’s me and me alone,” Macron said, according to lawmakers present at the event marking the end of the parliamentary session.

“I am the one who trusted Alexandre Benalla,” Macron told them, adding that Benalla had been a supporter during his campaign but that he felt like “the acts on May 1st were a disappointment or a betrayal.”

The 40-year-old president also insisted that “no one had been protected” from facing the rules and laws of the country.

Earlier in a stormy parliamentary session dominated by questions about Benalla, who faces charges of assault and impersonating a police officer, Prime Minister Edouard Philippe insisted “nothing has been hidden” from the public.

Videos have emerged over the past week showing 26-year-old Benalla hitting a young man during the May 1 protest in Paris while wearing a riot officer’s helmet and police armband, and wrestling a woman to the ground.

Macron’s aides did not inform prosecutors about the incident, despite a law requiring public officials to alert authorities if laws are broken.

The scandal, dubbed “Benallagate”, has prompted furious opposition claims of an attempted cover-up, which the government denies.

Benalla was suspended for two weeks without pay in May and transferred to an administrative role — though he was repeatedly seen in Macron’s security details until he was finally fired on Friday.

“I understand that some people might wonder if the decision taken was sufficient,” Philippe said of Benalla’s punishment, admitting that “a republic that strives to be exemplary is not always perfect”.

Macron’s office director Patrick Strzoda, appearing before a National Assembly committee investigating the case, acknowledged he imposed Benalla’s suspension as well as a “demotion” that involved stripping him of responsibility for some elements of the president’s security.

But he said that since no complaint was filed against Benalla, and that an analysis by the national police oversight body had not flagged any irregularities, he did not see any need to inform prosecutors.

“I determined that at my level I did not have enough elements to justify” such a move, Strzoda told lawmakers.

The head of the police oversight body, Marie-France Moneger-Guyomar’ch, also testified on Tuesday that police had no reason to believe the person in the Benalla video was not an officer and that the violence “was not illegitimate (if) carried out by police officers”.

Macron’s chief of staff Alexis Kohler will appear before a separate Senate committee on Thursday.

– Macron tight-lipped –
Macron has so far refused to speak to the public on the worst scandal to hit his government since he was elected in May promising to restore integrity to French politics.

He has called off Wednesday’s scheduled appearance along the Tour de France route in southern France, though his office insists the move was unrelated to “Benallagate”.

He also posted his first tweet in five days Tuesday — an unusually long absence for the social media-savvy president — to offer condolences to victims of the wildfires raging in Greece.

His silence appears to have dented his ratings, with 60 percent reporting an unfavourable opinion in an Ipsos poll published Tuesday — a record low for the 40-year-old centrist.

RELATED POSTS

France’s Galthie says ‘hot and cold’ Australia still a threat

“Be proud”: A conversation with France’s outgoing Ambassador Pierre-André Imbert

French Trade Minister Nicolas Forissier in Australia: strategic partnership, economic ambitions and a call to French businesses

An Elabe poll found 80 percent were “shocked” by the scandal, with 75 percent urging Macron to break his silence.

“The problem isn’t Alexandre Benalla’s misconduct but rather the structure that made it possible,” said Bruno Cautres, a political scientist in Paris.

“No matter the administrative or judicial consequences of this affair, it will mark a before and after for Emmanuel Macron.”

– ‘Lending police a hand’ –
Opposition lawmakers have seized on the scandal, paralysing debate in parliament while accusing the administration of trying to protect Benalla.

Christian Jacob of the rightwing Republicans has announced he will seek a no-confidence vote against the government, though this would be unlikely to succeed given the solid majority held by Macron’s LREM party.

Benalla has defended his intervention during traditional May Day demonstrations in the capital, which were marred by clashes between police and around 200 youths.

In a statement from his lawyers he said the young man and woman he was filmed scuffling with were “particularly violent individuals” he had been trying to “bring under control” while “lending a hand” to police.

Along with Benalla, Vincent Crase, a security agent employed by Macron’s party who was also at the scene, has been charged with assault.

Three police officers have also been charged with providing police surveillance footage of the scene to Benalla to help him try to justify his actions.

Source : AFP


Follow Le Courrier Australien on Facebook and Instagram, subscribe to our Newsletter for free.

Have your say ! Email you opinion pieces, ideas or corrections at redaction@lecourrieraustralien.com

Tags: BenallaFranceMacron
ShareTweetPinShareSendSend

Related Posts

The Moulin Rouge appoints an Australian as its new Ballet Mistress and heads Down Under to recruit new talent
Australia

The Moulin Rouge appoints an Australian as its new Ballet Mistress and heads Down Under to recruit new talent

July 8, 2026
France

Social media: Brussels continues assessment of French under-15 ban

July 2, 2026
France

Overtourism: Amsterdam, Florence and Venice lead Europe’s tourist tax revolution

June 19, 2026
“Be proud”: A conversation with France’s outgoing Ambassador Pierre-André Imbert
Australia

“Be proud”: A conversation with France’s outgoing Ambassador Pierre-André Imbert

April 28, 2026
French Trade Minister Nicolas Forissier in Australia: strategic partnership, economic ambitions and a call to French businesses
Australia

French Trade Minister Nicolas Forissier in Australia: strategic partnership, economic ambitions and a call to French businesses

April 23, 2026
France Strengthens Economic Ties with Australia: Minister Forissier on Tour
Australia

France Strengthens Economic Ties with Australia: Minister Forissier on Tour

April 21, 2026
Next Post

Honours for Australians involved in Thai cave rescue

US, Australia work to improve cyber capabilities

Discussion about this post

Popular news

    Support the Editor and get access to Premium Content

    Discover all the benefits of a subscription to the Australian Courier here. Get access to our Premium offer and unlock all content for unlimited access.

    SUBSCRIBE

    Latest News

    France’s Galthie says ‘hot and cold’ Australia still a threat

    France’s Galthie says ‘hot and cold’ Australia still a threat

    July 10, 2026

    Australian sprint star Gout out of U20 worlds with hamstring tear

    July 10, 2026
    India clinches agreement for Australian uranium supply

    India clinches agreement for Australian uranium supply

    July 10, 2026

    Pacific bloc considers ‘strong’ statement on China missile: Australia

    July 9, 2026

    Telstra national outage: trains halted, payments disrupted and emergency calls compromised

    July 8, 2026

    Premium

    Wine crisis in Australia: decades-old vines ripped out as industry brought to its knees

    Wine crisis in Australia: decades-old vines ripped out as industry brought to its knees

    June 19, 2026

    Tax reform: Albanese backs down on capital gains tax under Senate pressure

    June 18, 2026

    A small Mornington Peninsula enclave becomes Australia’s richest postcode

    June 18, 2026
    Pauline Hanson at the National Press Club: a “monocultural” Australia and the abolition of SBS

    Pauline Hanson at the National Press Club: a “monocultural” Australia and the abolition of SBS

    June 17, 2026

    Become a contributor!

    Contribute to the content of Courrier Australien by proposing an article.

    SUBMIT AN ARTICLE
    LCANews

    Le Courrier Australien Pty Ltd
    GPO 2729 – Sydney NSW 2001

    Level 2 – 123 Clarence Street
    Sydney 2000 – Australia

    RECENT POSTS

    • France’s Galthie says ‘hot and cold’ Australia still a threat
    • Australian sprint star Gout out of U20 worlds with hamstring tear
    • India clinches agreement for Australian uranium supply
    • Pacific bloc considers ‘strong’ statement on China missile: Australia
    • Telstra national outage: trains halted, payments disrupted and emergency calls compromised
    • The Moulin Rouge appoints an Australian as its new Ballet Mistress and heads Down Under to recruit new talent
    • “Resilience”: Michelle Belgiorno celebrates the enduring strength of the Australian bush at Art Atrium 48
    • French-Australian Excellence Awards 2026: Save the Date – Melbourne, 5 November

    CONTACT


    0 / 180

    © LE COURRIER AUSTRALIEN 2022 - Made by ArtWhere S.A           | Copyright | Privacy Policy | RSS

    No Result
    View All Result
    • Home
    • Australia
      • News
      • CORONAVIRUS
      • BUSINESS
      • PORTRAITS
      • LIFE STYLE
        • Sydney
        • Melbourne
      • SPORT
      • DID YOU KNOW
      • CULTURE
      • Practice
        • BACKPACKERS
        • EDUCATION
        • JOB
    • EUROPE
      • FRANCE
      • Belgium
    • WORLD
      • PACIFIC
      • CANADA
      • CHINA
      • USA
    • Opinion
    • LEARN FRENCH
    • AWARDS
      • BELGIAN-AUSTRALIAN EXCELLENCE AWARDS
        • The 2026 nominees: Belgian-Australian Excellence Awards
      • FRENCH AUSTRALIAN AWARDS
        • 2025 French-Australian Excellence Awards
        • 2024 French-Australian Excellence Awards
        • 2023 French-Australian Excellence Awards
        • 2022 French of The Year in Australia
    • EN
      • FR
      • ES

    © LE COURRIER AUSTRALIEN 2022 - Made by ArtWhere S.A           | Copyright | Privacy Policy | RSS

    Welcome Back!

    Sign In with Facebook
    Sign In with Google
    OR

    Login to your account below

    Forgotten Password? Sign Up

    Create New Account!

    Sign Up with Facebook
    Sign Up with Google
    OR

    Fill the forms bellow to register

    All fields are required. Log In

    Retrieve your password

    Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

    Log In
    Are you sure want to unlock this post?
    Unlock left : 0
    Are you sure want to cancel subscription?
    • EN
    • FR
    • ES
    X