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Why France's top power couple is making political waves
Why France's top power couple is making political waves

Telegraph

time29-06-2025

  • Politics
  • Telegraph

Why France's top power couple is making political waves

They are arguably France's top power couple. Lea Salamé, 45, the co-host of the country's top morning radio news show for 11 years, has just been picked to anchor the evening TV news on state-run France 2 – the equivalent of BBC News at Ten. Her partner Raphael Glucksmann, a centre-Left heavyweight, also 45, is limbering up to be a presidential contender. On Monday, he presented his 'vision for France', a 42-point plan to 'regenerate democracy 'and 'de-monarchise' the country when Emmanuel Macron's second, and final, term comes to an end in 2027. The high-profile pair has shone a fresh spotlight on the (some would say cosy) relationship between French politicians and political journalists, which has given rise to a string of romances over the years and continues to raise eyebrows over potential conflicts of interest. The sudden focus on their relationship comes as the race to succeed Mr Macron – whose presidency is increasingly rudderless domestically – is heating up, with several potential presidential candidates showing their colours in recent days. Mr Glucksmann, an MEP and darling of bourgeois bohemian Left-wing moderates and Greens, emerged as a possible national leader last June after a strong showing in the European Parliament elections. His Socialist-backed Place Publique came third, almost overtaking Mr Macron's Renaissance party. Jordan Bardella's hard-Right National Rally finished way out in front. The staunch European federalist and Russia critic has since urged the French Left to jettison ties with Jean-Luc Mélenchon, the radical Left-wing firebrand, and return to its moderate, social democratic roots. The ambitious power duo's sudden surge in media prominence has sparked questions over whether they can both keep their jobs in the coming months. Aymeric Caron, an MP allied with Mr Mélenchon's France Unbowed party, said that while he respected Ms Salamé as a journalist, 'her partner is a politician who wants to play a leading role, yet the [evening] news offers us an interpretation of events and society with a hierarchy of information and political interviews. I wonder how this mix will work in terms of public service.' Antoine Chuzeville, a French national union of journalists (SNJ) rep at France Télévisions, a state broadcaster, added: 'If [Me Glucksmann] finds himself in a major controversy in early September, it will be very complicated for her.' However, he told Gala magazine the French were now used to such situations, pointing to the so-called 'Anne Sinclair precedent'. Ms Sinclair was France's best-known female political chat show host when she became romantically attached to former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn in 1988. She withdrew from the 7/7 show in 1997 when he took up his finance ministry post to avoid a conflict of interest. DSK, as he was known, later saw his presidential ambitions scuppered when he was arrested in New York in 2011 on sexual abuse charges of a hotel maid, charges that were later dropped. Quizzed on Monday, Mr Glucksmann promised: 'The issue will be decided in a completely transparent manner that will avoid any conflict of interest. She is she, and I am me. It's 2025, and I couldn't imagine discussing with her whether she should or shouldn't do something so important for her career because we are involved in a political process. 'So, things are out in the open, transparent, very clear.' Ms Salamé said she could withdraw from her job if Mr Glucksmann officially threw down the presidential gauntlet, but that the French were now mature enough to accept they both had high-flying jobs they could keep separate: 'Times have changed, and the French, including politicians, are much more feminist than one might think.' Media interest in the couple came as the 'pre-campaign' for the French presidency is starting to gather pace despite two years remaining in Mr Macron's second five-year term. The centrist French president lost his absolute majority in disastrous snap legislative elections last June that neutered his domestic powers. Not only that but the results left a deeply divided parliament and since then a string of prime ministers have been unable to make headway amid the constant threat of no-confidence motions. After a year in limbo, Mr Macron could theoretically now call fresh elections. Alain Duhamel, one of France's highest-profile political analysts, told The Telegraph: 'There's uncertainty about how long the government will last, and since Macron is regaining his power of dissolution, there's a certain amount of uncertainty about what might happen in the next, let's say four or five months. 'And from this point of view, some people are saying, now's the time to make a move before the political scene changes again, so let's make a mark.' Against this backdrop, Mr Glucksmann is the second potential candidate to test the waters this week. Dominique de Villepin, Jacques Chirac's swashbuckling foreign minister who famously said 'non' to the US-led war in Iraq war at the UN in 2003, launched his own Humanist France party and released a book – de rigueur for French presidential hopefuls – called The Power To Say No. Nouvel Obs, a French news magazine, said the title was 'misleading' as it really meant ''yes' to a presidential candidacy in 2027'. The 71-year-old Napoleon fan, who has never held elected office and harks from the centre-Right, has launched a phoenix-style comeback largely sparked by the Israel-Gaza conflict. His defence of the Palestinian cause and De Gaulle-style pro-Arab stance has seen him become an unlikely hero of the radical Left. He was recently mobbed at the Fete de l'Huma, an annual Communist bash organised by L'Humanité, a far-Left newspaper. His central tenet is to unite the French in the defence of 'social justice and republican order'. Mr Villepin argues that France needs an impartial and experienced statesman in a world 'entering the age of the new despots' who believe 'freedom is a luxury that today's world can no longer afford'. His panache and diplomatic credentials have seen him surprisingly crowned France's most popular political figure for the second straight month. However, in terms of voter intentions, he is languishing at the 2.5-5 per cent mark. 'De Villepin has alienated all Right-wing voters, and those on the Left like him but will never vote for him,' a senior member of the conservative Republicans party told Valeurs Actuelles. 'For the moment, he only talks about international issues. The day he ventures into economic issues, the honeymoon will quickly come to an end.' Further Left, Mr Mélenchon is expected to run for a fourth time. In a recent interview with The Telegraph, the ex-Trotskyist, who came third in 2022, said he was ready, adding: 'If it's me, it's me, if it's someone else, it's someone else, but we'll take the decision that makes us the most effective electorally.' On the Right, a raft of other potential candidates are jostling for position, notably the interior minister Bruno Retailleau and Gérald Darmanin, the justice minister, while Gabriel Attal, the ex-Macron prime minister, hopes to replace his former boss. Meanwhile, the biggest potential presidential hitters continue to plough their furrow, albeit with a string of handicaps. Marine Le Pen still hopes to run but is stymied by an electoral ban over a recent corruption conviction that cannot be overturned until next year. Polls suggest the hard-Right leader would come way out in front in round one of presidential elections, as would Mr Bardella, her 29-year-old lieutenant. Amid reported tensions between the two, this week Ms Le Pen conceded: 'I have accepted the possibility that I may be unable to run. Jordan has accepted the possibility that he may have to take up the torch. Until then, I will continue to fight.' Currently, the chief rival to Ms Le Pen and Mr Bardella is Edouard Philippe, Mr Macron's popular ex-prime minister, who announced his presidential intentions in 2020. Like Mr Villepin, the centre-Right mayor of Le Havre also released a book this month. Called The Price of Our Lies, it is similarly alarmist about France's decline and offers pledges to fight populism and to enact labour and pension reforms. But Mr Philippe this week faced a legal complaint from a civil servant over alleged bullying, favouritism and illegal influence peddling. He dismissed the complaint as a 'sad vendetta' by 'a civil servant whose contract was not renewed'. Mr Duhamel said he did not think the complaint would torpedo his ambitions. 'But I don't think Philippe is active and visible enough at the moment. That's apparently his strategy, but I don't think it's the best one,' he said, pointing out that he is being caught up by Mr Retailleau, the interior minister, in the polls. With two years to go before the presidential elections and no national mandate bar his mayoral post, 'his problem is staying power,' added Christelle Craplet in Le Soir, a political scientist.

The French sculptors building the new Statue of Liberty
The French sculptors building the new Statue of Liberty

Spectator

time25-06-2025

  • Politics
  • Spectator

The French sculptors building the new Statue of Liberty

At a miserable-looking rally for the centre-left Place Publique in mid-March, its co-president, MEP Raphaël Glucksmann, made international headlines calling for the Trump administration to return the Statue of Liberty, gifted by the French in 1886 to commemorate the Declaration of Independence: 'It was our gift to you. But apparently you despise her. So she will be happy here with us.' The predictably sensationalist headlines dissipated in a flurry of Republican outrage against 'the low-level French politician' as quickly as they had arrived. But Glucksmann's demand – sincere or not – caught the attention of a group of sculptors who, in their words, have 'taken up the dream of civilisation' to produce monumental civic sculpture. Two days after the MEP's proclamation, Atelier Missor posted on X: 'Keep the Statue of Liberty; it's rightfully yours. But get ready for another one. A New Statue of Liberty, much bigger, made from titanium to withstand millions of years. We, the French people, are going to make it again!' It was accompanied by an AI-generated image of her future titanium partner Prometheus. So far, so American Golden Age, validated by a typically laconic reply from Elon Musk: 'Looks cool.' The brief online exchange was a public-relations coup for Missor – and decried as such by cynics. Surely no one believed that this hare-brained scheme could be feasibly implemented? Think again. To understand the sincerity of Missor, one must return to where their ambitions started. 'I found the toppling of public statues intolerable,' its namesake founder Missor Movahed tells me at their studio on the outskirts of Meaux, 40 miles north-east of Paris. 'I did not understand what these people were doing or what they were saying. Would they rather these great men had never existed?' he says, referring to the convulsive, iconoclastic riots of 2020 – the respective beheadings and defacements of Columbus, Colston and Churchill. Movahed was 30 years old and had no prior sculptural training. He and his friends began discussing the postmodern cultural malaise on a YouTube channel from a disused garage in Nice, with the ambition of producing small figurative busts, at scale, of the luminaries to whose lives and writings they were turning: Nietzsche, Napoleon, Joan of Arc, Dostoevsky. The son of a successful painter, Movahed grew up in Paris with neither plans nor qualification: 'For 12 years, I did nothing with my life: I led a life of a wastrel bohème. But being in Paris – the greatest work of art in the world – I felt a growing weight to produce something monumental… to create monuments that will stand on the landscape of humanity.' All simultaneously informed by and documented on YouTube – a kind of modern carnet – they constructed rubber moulds and later a working smelter for limited-edition bronzes fashioned by hand. 'There is no sculptor or foundry that produces classical civic sculpture in France to whom we could apprentice ourselves: all of them have closed, other than those we have on the internet.' Don't mistake the lack of formal training, however, for a lack of rigour or thought: 'We sculpt the statues out of clay always questioning what one of the Greek philosophers would say if he were watching… [Only a few other] highly specialist sculptors are using the 1,000-year-old 'lost wax method'.' This process involves 1,300°C molten bronze being poured into plaster casts of wax models. Within six months, orders were in the hundreds; by their third year, they numbered more than 5,000, helped by the binge in late-night mail-ordering that came to characterise successive lockdowns. Online, Missor had captivated a receptive audience, one that was seeking a resurrection of their European cultural inheritance. In August 2023, Missor received its first public commission: a €170,000 gilded bronze of Joan of Arc from the centre-right mayor of Nice, Christian Estrosi. The 15th-century soldier-saint is a figure fiercely contested in France: à gauche, a martyred, cross-dressing teenage farmer; to the right, a devout Catholic rebel who lifted the siege of Orléans. Delivered a year later, the nine-tonne, 4.5-metre high statue was unveiled in December at the inauguration of a new car park next to the Eglise Sainte-Jeanne d'Arc. But there was a problem: the statue was found to have broken public procurement obligations and in January 2025 it was ordered that she should be removed. It sparked a huge backlash and in March this year, protestors arrived by dawn to pour a layer of asphalt around the base. Joan was going nowhere. There is no sign of the impending threat of prosecution when I arrive at the atelier, a corrugated shed off the Parisian suburban line: a dozen workers in dungarees – a uniform they trace to the compagnons du devoir who built the French cathedrals – are methodically plastering a monumental classical face surrounded by scaffolding. Their troubles played out between the regional and national headlines, the atelier seldom gives interviews. For nearly three hours, we speak, stood between remnant prototypes and plaster models that are now the subject of public – and legal – controversy. 'All sculptures are public memories that last, until we topple them, and by not making them we are losing our memories,' Movahed tells me. 'There are many who are artistically revolted by what we do as a momentary reaction to contemporary art. But there is a morbidity to civic 'fine art' today because of the way it depresses those who have funded it – us, the people.' He explains that titanium has never been used before for figurative sculpture. He views it as 'the frontier of both engineering and art – two things that must work together'. And for him the Franco-American alliance that spawned the Statue of Liberty was more than simply a historic fact: 'The founding myths of revolution that underpin the French and American republics represent an emancipation of the individual will and an unleashing of potential.' He talks with such passion that he forgets the sans-culottes tore down civic sculpture on an industrial scale. 'The Statue of Liberty represented the most beautiful thing a country can do: it was by the people, for the people. Prometheus will represent the possibilities of modern patronage: we have received hundreds of messages asking us to open crowdfunding.' Indeed, Movahed does not name the 'significant American backers' that have pledged support but cites Musk's Starbase as the intended location. A tiny bronze maquette of the rebel Titan – credited with shaping humans from clay – sits atop a pyramidal pedestal no taller than a hand that will 'chart the history of civilisation'. It is a world away from Boca Chica, Texas, and the task he illustrates with maddening conviction under a looming court order is beyond reason. 'We are called crazy, but our aim is simple: to let people dream as we have chosen to dream.'

Raphaël Glucksmann sets out policy platform for 2027 French presidential election
Raphaël Glucksmann sets out policy platform for 2027 French presidential election

LeMonde

time24-06-2025

  • Politics
  • LeMonde

Raphaël Glucksmann sets out policy platform for 2027 French presidential election

In a trendy café in the 10 th arrondissement of Paris, Raphaël Glucksmann tried on Monday, June 23, to answer a major question. "What do we want for France?" he asked, holding up a yellow document – the color of his party, Place Publique – entitled "Our Vision for France." "That's what politics is about: working, working, working on a vision that is turned into a project," he said. In this 100-page document titled "Act I," the founder of Place Publique outlined his "vision" across 42 policy areas, after nine months of work alongside 3,000 activists and a quiet tour around France, away from the cameras. The clear objective, he said, is "that the pro-European and deeply democratic left should stop being trampled on and stop putting its principles in its pocket," a reference to his left-wing rival, Jean-Luc Mélenchon, from whom he paradoxically draws some inspiration: Years before Glucksmann, Mélenchon, a three-time French presidential candidate, based his movement La France Insoumise (LFI, radical left) on an extensive manifesto titled "L'Avenir en commun" ("A Shared Future"), which he developed and regularly updated with party activists.

French sculptors pledge to build titanium Statue of Liberty – and Elon Musk approves
French sculptors pledge to build titanium Statue of Liberty – and Elon Musk approves

Yahoo

time19-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

French sculptors pledge to build titanium Statue of Liberty – and Elon Musk approves

France's self-professed last sculpture foundry has weighed into a row over whether the US should return the Statue of Liberty to its country of origin by proposing to build a new one out of titanium. The proposal by Nice-based Atelier Missor, which specialises in sculpting famed French figures such as Napoleon and Joan of Arc, received approval from Elon Musk, who called the idea 'cool' on X. The foundry's plan to build a new Statue of Liberty 'to withstand millions of years' followed a call by French centre-Left MEP Raphael Glucksmann for America to return the original. During a political rally of his Place Publique movement, Mr Glucksmann launched a blistering attack on the Trump administration in which he said: 'We're going to say to the Americans who have chosen to side with the tyrants, to the Americans who fired researchers for demanding scientific freedom: 'Give us back the Statue of Liberty.'' Mr Glucksmann is a member of the Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats and a staunch supporter of Ukraine. France gave the statue, which stands 305 feet tall and weighs 450,000lbs, to the US as a gift on July 4, 1884, to commemorate the 108th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. The iconic copper-clad sculpture was created by Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi and sits on Liberty Island in New York Harbour. 'We gave it to you as a gift,' Mr Glucksmann went on, citing the United States' founding values of freedom and liberty. 'But apparently you despise it. So it will be just fine here at home.' He concluded his remarks by stating France would welcome top researchers who were fired in the cuts to the US National Institutes of Health and similar organisations. His comments prompted a fiery rebuke from Karoline Leavitt, White House press secretary, who said: 'My advice to that unnamed low-level French politician would be to remind them that it's only because of the United States of America that the French are not speaking German right now. 'So they should be very grateful to our great country.' French commentators pointed out that if it weren't for French military and financial support during the War of Independence, America would likely still be a 'British colony' today. Mr Glucksmann later fired back: 'No one, of course, will come and steal the Statue of Liberty. The statue is yours. But what it embodies belongs to everyone. And if the free world no longer interests your government, then we will take up the torch, here in Europe.' Wading into the row, Atelier Missor wrote: 'To our fellow Americans: we are the last sculpture foundry in France and we have a message for you.' 'Keep the Statue of Liberty; it's rightfully yours. But get ready for another one. 'A New Statue of Liberty, much bigger, made out of titanium to withstand millions of years. 'We, the French people, are going to make it again!' The foundry, which said its aim was to fulfil Napoleon's dream to 'make Paris the capital of the universe', was recently commissioned to build a monument statue of Joan of Arc for the French Riviera city of Nice. However, in January, the local state prefect cancelled the €170,000 contract and ordered the 4.5-ton golden bronze statue to be taken down, saying Nice's Right-wing town hall had failed to respect the proper public tender process. Atelier Missor said the annulment had left it on the verge of bankruptcy. A crowdfunding campaign to pay for the statue launched by Nice former deputy mayor in charge of culture has gathered €50,000. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

French sculptors pledge to build titanium Statue of Liberty – and Elon Musk approves
French sculptors pledge to build titanium Statue of Liberty – and Elon Musk approves

Telegraph

time19-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Telegraph

French sculptors pledge to build titanium Statue of Liberty – and Elon Musk approves

France's self-professed last sculpture foundry has weighed into a row over whether the US should return the Statue of Liberty to its country of origin by proposing to build a new one out of titanium. The proposal by Nice-based Atelier Missor, which specialises in sculpting famed French figures such as Napoleon and Joan of Arc, received approval from Elon Musk, who called the idea 'cool' on X. The foundry's plan to build a new Statue of Liberty 'to withstand millions of years' followed a call by French centre-Left MEP Raphael Glucksmann for America to return the original. During a political rally of his Place Publique movement, Mr Glucksmann launched a blistering attack on the Trump administration in which he said: 'We're going to say to the Americans who have chosen to side with the tyrants, to the Americans who fired researchers for demanding scientific freedom: 'Give us back the Statue of Liberty.'' Mr Glucksmann is a member of the Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats and a staunch supporter of Ukraine. France gifted the statue, which stands 305 feet tall and weighs 450,000lbs, to the US on July 4, 1884, to commemorate the 108th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. The iconic copper-clad sculpture was created by Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi and sits on Liberty Island in New York Harbour. 'We gave it to you as a gift,' Mr Glucksmann went on, citing the United States' founding values of freedom and liberty. 'But apparently you despise it. So it will be just fine here at home.' He concluded his remarks by stating France would welcome top researchers who were fired in the cuts to the US National Institutes of Health and similar organisations. His comments prompted a fiery rebuke from Karoline Leavitt, White House press secretary, who said: 'My advice to that unnamed low-level French politician would be to remind them that it's only because of the United States of America that the French are not speaking German right now. 'So they should be very grateful to our great country.' French commentators pointed out that if it weren't for French military and financial support during the War of Independence, America would likely still be a 'British colony' today. Mr Glucksmann later fired back: 'No one, of course, will come and steal the Statue of Liberty. The statue is yours. But what it embodies belongs to everyone. And if the free world no longer interests your government, then we will take up the torch, here in Europe.' 'Withstand millions of years' Wading into the row, Atelier Missor wrote: 'To our fellow Americans: we are the last sculpture foundry in France and we have a message for you.' 'Keep the Statue of Liberty; it's rightfully yours. But get ready for another one. 'A New Statue of Liberty, much bigger, made out of titanium to withstand millions of years. 'We, the French people, are going to make it again!' The foundry, which said its aim was to fulfil Napoleon's dream to 'make Paris the capital of the universe', was recently commissioned to build a monument statue of Joan of Arc for the French Riviera city of Nice. However, in January, the local state prefect cancelled the €170,000 contract and ordered the 4.5-ton golden bronze statue to be taken down, saying Nice's Right-wing town hall had failed to respect the proper public tender process. Atelier Missor said the annulment had left it on the verge of bankruptcy. A crowdfunding campaign to pay for the statue launched by Nice former deputy mayor in charge of culture has gathered €50,000.

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