Tag: Paris

  • Left-wing candidates set to retain control in Paris and Marseille Mayoral races

    Left-wing candidates set to retain control in Paris and Marseille Mayoral races

    Paris, France – France’s two largest cities are set to remain firmly under leftist control following Sunday’s municipal run-off elections, with pollsters projecting Socialist victories that underscore the persistent grip of open-border globalists on urban France. In Paris, outgoing Mayor Anne Hidalgo’s deputy, Emmanuel Grégoire, defeated right-wing challenger Rachida Dati, extending the Socialist Party’s quarter-century dominance over the capital.

    In Marseille, incumbent leftist mayor Benoît Payan comfortably beat far-right candidate Franck Allisio, dashing hopes of a breakthrough for Marine Le Pen’s National Rally (RN) in the country’s second city.

    These outcomes, while disappointing for conservatives who hoped for a shift toward sovereignty and law-and-order, highlight a troubling reality: France’s major cities continue to serve as magnets for mass immigration, particularly from Muslim-majority countries and sub-Saharan Africa, fueling crime, cultural erosion, and social strain that conservative voices have long warned about.

    Low turnout—only 57%, the worst in recent memory outside the COVID-disrupted 2020 vote—suggests widespread disillusionment among French voters who feel their concerns about unchecked migration are ignored by both establishment leftists and a fragmented right.

    Grégoire, 48, hailed the result as Paris “staying true to its history,” but for many conservatives this means continuing Hidalgo’s legacy of lax policies that have turned parts of the City of Light into no-go zones plagued by migrant tent encampments, street crime, and parallel societies. Dati, a former Sarkozy minister, had positioned herself as a tougher alternative, but Parisian voters—shaped by decades of socialist governance and demographic change—opted for continuity.

    In Marseille, Payan’s re-election further entrenches leftist control in a city long overwhelmed by immigration-related challenges, including drug trafficking, gang violence, and integration failures. The far right’s inability to capitalize on widespread public frustration with these issues points to deeper problems within the conservative movement: fragmented messaging and failure to connect with working-class voters tired of seeing their neighborhoods transformed.

    The elections, watched closely as a barometer ahead of next year’s presidential race to succeed Emmanuel Macron, delivered mixed signals. Centrist Édouard Philippe held Le Havre, positioning himself as a potential anti-RN contender. The RN secured a hold in Perpignan but fell short in Toulon and Nîmes, where a Communist candidate prevailed. Overall, the far right’s limited gains reflect voter hesitation despite legitimate grievances over mass migration’s impact on housing, welfare systems, and national identity.

    From a pro-conservative, anti-immigration standpoint, these results are a wake-up call. Socialist victories in Paris and Marseille will likely accelerate policies that prioritize migrants over native French citizens—more asylum approvals, sanctuary-like practices, and reluctance to deport criminal elements.

    Black and Muslim immigrant communities, often concentrated in these urban centers, have been linked to disproportionate rates of certain crimes and social tensions, a reality mainstream media and leftist politicians refuse to address honestly. Deportation of illegal entrants and failed asylum seekers remains the only sustainable path to restoring order and preserving France’s cultural heritage.

    A village of canvases spreads out as far as the eye can see on the median of Avenue de Flandre, in the 19th arrondissement of Paris. (AFP)
    A village of canvases spreads out as far as the eye can see on the median of Avenue de Flandre, in the 19th arrondissement of Paris. (AFP)

    Pro-sovereignty conservatives argue that without bold action—mass deportations, strict border controls, and an end to socialist-enabled demographic replacement—cities like Paris and Marseille will become unrecognizable, serving as warnings for the rest of Europe and America. The low turnout suggests many Frenchmen have given up on the ballot box, but the underlying discontent with open-border policies will not disappear.

    As France heads toward presidential elections, these municipal results reinforce the urgent need for a genuine conservative alternative that prioritizes French citizens first, enforces immigration laws rigorously, and rejects the failed multicultural experiment pushed by both socialists and establishment centrists.

    For full projections and analysis, see France 24 coverage here. Le Monde on Paris results. BBC News

  • Gérard Depardieu found guilty in sexual assault trial

    Gérard Depardieu found guilty in sexual assault trial

    French film star Gérard Depardieu has been found guilty of sexually assaulting two women on a film set at a trial in Paris and given a suspended jail term of 18 months.

    The 76-year-old actor was accused by the two women of groping them during work on a film in 2021. Depardieu had denied the allegations against him and his lawyer said he would appeal.

    The court in Paris found that one of the women, a set dresser named Amélie, had given consistent evidence while the actor’s accounts had changed over time.

    She told reporters afterwards she was “very moved” and satisfied with the verdict, which for her was “a victory, a major step forward”.

    Depardieu was also convicted of assaulting an assistant director called Sarah, which was not her real name.

    The actor was not in court to hear the verdict but was instead working on a film set in the Azores.

    Carine Durrieu-Diebolt, the lawyer acting for the two women, said she hoped the verdict marked the end of impunity for an artist in the film industry.

    “It’s a victory for two women on a film set but it’s a victory for all the women behind this case and I’m thinking of all of Depardieu’s other victims,” she told reporters.

    The lawyer also noted the case had come to an end hours before the Cannes film festival was due to start.

    The judge said there was no reason to doubt the word of the two women victims, who had told the court how Depardieu had touched them on intimate parts of the body, using lewd language.

    He placed Depardieu on a list of sex offenders and ordered him to pay compensation of €1,000 ($1,114.89) each to Amélie and Sarah for “secondary victimisation”, a recent innovation covering the additional suffering for the women from the trial itself.

    Depardieu’s lawyer Jérémie Assous had accused the women of lying during their evidence.

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    Amélie (R) told reporters after the verdict she felt justice had been done. (AFP)

    The assaults took place in September 2021 when Depardieu was making a film called Les Volets Verts (The Green Shutters) about an ageing actor coming to terms with his declining powers.

    This was Depardieu’s first trial on sexual assault charges. Several other women have made similar allegations in the media, and an alleged rape case could come to trial in the future.

    After the trial, the actor was invited to join his close friend and fellow actor Fanny Ardant for a film-shoot in the Azores.

    At the end of the trial in Paris in late March, prosecutor Laurent Guy said: “It’s perfectly possible to be an excellent actor and a great father – and still commit a crime.

    “You are not here to pass judgment on French cinema. You are here to judge Gérard Depardieu, just as you would any other citizen.”

    Claude Vincent, representing one of the two women plaintiffs, described Depardieu as a “misogynist” and a “case-study in sexism”.

    Depardieu’s lawyer had demanded an acquittal and called the plaintiffs’ team “more militants than lawyers”.

    “They cannot bear that there should even be a defence. They think any defence is a supplementary assault,” he told the court.

    The first plaintiff – 54-year-old set decorator Amélie – told the court that after a minor argument with Depardieu, he caught her between his legs and held her by the hips.

    The second woman – a 34-year-old assistant film director – said the actor had touched her buttocks and breasts through her clothes on three separate occasions. She chose to maintain her anonymity and was not in court to hear the verdict.

    Depardieu denied the allegations, saying only that he might have touched the women accidentally or to keep his balance.

    At the end of the hearings, Depardieu said: “My name has been dragged through the mud by lies and insults.

    “A trial can be a very special experience for an actor. Seeing all this anger, the police, the press. It’s like being in a science fiction film, except it’s not science fiction. It’s life.”

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    A court sketch of Depardieu during a hearing in his trial in March. (AFP/Getty Images)

    He thanked the prosecution and defence teams for giving him insights into how courts operate. “These lessons may be an inspiration for me one day if I get to play a lawyer,” he said.

    Depardieu said he had not worked as an actor for three years since the sexual allegations against him began to circulate.

    However earlier this month it was reported that he had begun working on a film directed by Fanny Ardant. Depardieu is playing a magician on a mysterious island, according to media reports.

    Ardant appeared with Depardieu in Les Volets Verts and spoke in his defence at the trial.

    “Genius – in whatever form it takes – carries within it an element of the extravagant, the untamed, the dangerous. (Depardieu) is the monster and the saint,” she said.

    Another veteran French actress took Depardieu’s side on Monday. In a rare interview with French television, Brigitte Bardot, 90, deplored how “talented people who touch the buttocks of a girl are consigned to the deepest dungeon.”

    “Feminism isn’t my thing,” Bardot said. “Personally, I like men.”