Arcom official challenges RSF study on CNews at press conference, with France 2 broadcast screen.
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Arcom challenges RSF study on CNews used by France 2

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France’s audiovisual regulator Arcom has challenged a study by Reporters Without Borders (RSF) on CNews’s pluralism, featured in France 2’s “Complément d’enquête.” Arcom states no rule violations occurred in March 2025. CNews hosts have dismissed the probe as biased.

On Wednesday, Reporters Without Borders (RSF) released a report on CNews, owned by Vincent Bolloré. The NGO analyzed 700,000 on-screen banners over a month and concluded the channel cheats on political balance rules to favor the far right, using “nighttime catch-ups” to create an illusion of pluralism.

Thursday evening, France 2’s “Complément d’enquête,” directed by Tristan Waleckx and spanning eight months, relied on this study to elaborate the accusations. A media figure described the setup as “stitched with white thread.”

Arcom challenged these findings. “There are no circumventions of political pluralism rules on CNews in March 2025, and if there had been, we would have identified and intervened,” the regulator stated before broadcast.

On Friday, November 28, CNews host Pascal Praud responded in “L’heure des pros.” He called the RSF study “manifestly bogus” with “biased judgment parameters,” mocking revelations like his fondness for Nicolas Sarkozy or no link between immigration and insecurity. Praud criticized the public broadcaster’s 4 billion euros annual cost, questioning privatization.

Mathieu Bock-Côté, CNews columnist since 2021 and Éric Zemmour’s successor, viewed the show as merely prosecuting the editorial line, without evidence of fraudulent information fabrication. He credits CNews’s success to covering realities denied elsewhere.

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Reactions on X are polarized along political lines. Supporters of CNews hail Arcom's challenge to RSF's study as a decisive rebuttal, accusing RSF and France 2's Complément d’enquête of bias and disinformation funded by public money, while demanding privatization of public broadcasters. Critics dismiss Arcom's statement as protectionism for Bolloré-owned media, insisting CNews lacks pluralism and urging legal challenges. CNews figures like Pascal Praud labeled the investigation poorly conducted.

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Illustration of a tense French courtroom scene depicting a lawsuit between public broadcasters France Télévisions and Radio France against CNews, Europe 1, and Le JDD, with Culture Minister Rachida Dati in the background.
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France télévisions and radio france demand 1.5 million euros from cnews and allies

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France Télévisions and Radio France have sued CNews, Europe 1, and Le JDD for denigration, seeking 1.5 million euros in damages. The public groups denounce an orchestrated enterprise of economic and institutional destabilization. Culture Minister Rachida Dati regretted that this approach was not coordinated with oversight authorities.

Pascal Praud, host of the flagship show 'L’Heure des pros' on CNews, has become the iconic face of Vincent Bolloré's ultra-conservative media empire. Ignoring warnings from Arcom, he surrounds himself with increasingly radical guests, propelling the channel to the top of ratings in 2025 with a 3.4% audience share.

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Attacks on French public broadcasting have intensified with the launch of a parliamentary inquiry commission in autumn 2025. Initiated by the Union des droites pour la République (UDR), allied with the Rassemblement national (RN), the probe examines the neutrality, operations, and funding of the public service. Recurrent criticisms include alleged ideological bias and excessive costs.

A poll reveals that 52% of French people anticipate the failure of the 2026 finance bill and want a censure motion against the Lecornu government. The finance commission rejected the first part of the budget, and debates in the National Assembly begin this Friday without using article 49.3. Oppositions, like the RN and socialists, threaten to block the bill with their counter-proposals.

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Paris judicial court examined on Thursday, January 15, a defamation complaint filed by Christian Tein, Kanak independentist leader, against Sonia Backès, a loyalist figure, who accused him of being 'the leader of the terrorists' after the 2024 riots. Tein appeared via videoconference from Nouméa, while Backès did not attend the hearing. This case comes ahead of an Élysée meeting on New Caledonia's future.

Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu's administration maintains its threat to dissolve the National Assembly if censured over the Mercosur deal or 2026 budget, with snap elections prepared alongside March municipals to deter PS and LR support for opposition motions. As previously reported, Hollande and Barnier criticize the tactic; PS confirms no censure backing and eyes Monday budget talks.

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A 1,482-page ruling issued on July 7 by France's Cour de justice de la République grants non-lieu to Agnès Buzyn, Edouard Philippe, and Olivier Véran, but highlights grave shortcomings in the COVID-19 crisis management from January to July 2020. The magistrates identify a lack of anticipation, structural dysfunctions, and errors that could have prevented many of the 32,000 deaths. This merciless document could mark the history of France's pandemic response.

 

 

 

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