Dramatic scene of French Culture Minister Rachida Dati and colleagues defending public broadcasting during a tense parliamentary hearing.
Dramatic scene of French Culture Minister Rachida Dati and colleagues defending public broadcasting during a tense parliamentary hearing.
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Auditions at public broadcasting commission defend the sector

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During hearings on February 4 and 5, 2026, before the parliamentary inquiry commission on public broadcasting, Culture Minister Rachida Dati and former ministers unanimously defended the struggling sector. They criticized the biased questions from rapporteur Charles Alloncle, while a tense incident pitted him against the commission president. Dati called for preserving public broadcasting without weakening it.

The parliamentary inquiry commission on public broadcasting, created at the request of Eric Ciotti's Union des droites pour la République (UDR), allied with the Rassemblement national and advocating privatization, saw a shift on February 4 and 5, 2026. For the first time in two months, hearings allowed defense arguments for the sector to be heard, despite the biased approach of rapporteur Charles Alloncle (UDR, Hérault).

On Wednesday, February 4, the hearing of four former Culture ministers – Aurélie Filippetti, Franck Riester, Roselyne Bachelot, and Rima Abdul Malak – along with figures like Laurence Bloch, former director of France Inter from 2014 to 2022, showed unanimity in support of public broadcasting. Their factual responses countered questions on Delphine Ernotte's performance bonus, cost/audience comparisons with private media, or the 'hyperconcentration' of production companies for France Télévisions.

A tense exchange pitted president Jérémie Patrier-Leitus (Horizons) against rapporteur Alloncle, the latter suggesting links to the Mediawan group. The hearing was suspended over these 'very serious accusations.' The next day, Patrier-Leitus called for a 'dignified and respectful framework.'

On Thursday, February 5, Rachida Dati, heard for nearly three hours, stressed that 'French public broadcasting must be preserved' and 'we must not weaken it. We must work together.' On the critical financial situation of France Télévisions highlighted by the Cour des comptes, she recalled non-profitable public service missions and stated that 'the State will take its responsibilities,' while advocating structural reform and a common holding project. On impartiality, she referred to the Arcom regulator.

Dati reprimanded Delphine Ernotte for calling CNews a 'far-right channel' in September, deeming it 'not clever.' She also addressed the Legrand-Cohen affair, where public broadcasters were accused of collusion with the Parti socialiste after a September video showing Thomas Legrand saying: 'We do what it takes for [Rachida] Dati, Patrick [Cohen] and me.' Dati criticized this vocabulary as inappropriate but deemed secret recordings 'unacceptable.'

Dati's hearing proceeded calmly, contrasting with the commission's usual tensions. This is not Alloncle's first controversy; he was called to order by the Assemblée president in December 2025, and four deputies are requesting another sanction.

Hvad folk siger

Reactions on X focus on the dramatic tension in the public broadcasting commission hearings, particularly the president's threat to suspend the session amid rapporteur Charles Alloncle's probing questions. Rachida Dati's testimony draws attention for defending the sector's missions while advocating deep reforms and accusing 'Complément d'Enquête' of unethical practices. Sentiments vary: right-leaning accounts criticize media bias and scandals, media outlets report neutrally on reform needs, and some express frustration with perceived evasiveness.

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Delphine Ernotte testifying at the concluding hearing of France's National Assembly inquiry commission on public broadcasting, surrounded by deputies and documents.
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Auditions of French public broadcasting inquiry commission end

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Auditions of the French National Assembly’s inquiry commission on public broadcasting’s neutrality, operations, and funding ended on Wednesday, April 8, 2026, with Delphine Ernotte, CEO of France Télévisions. Over 200 hours of hearings and nearly 250 people questioned marked these five and a half months of work launched in late November 2025. Rapporteur Charles Alloncle will present his conclusions to deputies before month’s end.

Charles Alloncle’s report on public broadcasting, published on May 5, 2026, on the National Assembly website, has sparked sharp controversy. France Télévisions’ president and the Prime Minister criticized it, while La France insoumise proposes reinstating the TV license fee. A complaint for illegal interest-taking targets the rapporteur.

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Thirty deputies on the public broadcasting inquiry commission will vote on Monday on publishing rapporteur Charles Alloncle’s report. The document proposes controversial measures such as banning reality TV on France Télévisions and merging channels. Tensions are high within the commission, with president Jérémie Patrier-Leitus advocating transparency while criticizing press leaks.

Four days before the first round of the 2026 Paris municipal elections, Rachida Dati, the right-wing candidate, acknowledged at a rally that the race would be very tight. She urged voters to show responsibility by choosing reason. This mobilization comes as she trails Emmanuel Grégoire in voting intentions.

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Rachida Dati, Les Républicains (LR) candidate who came second in the first round of Paris municipal elections with 25.46% of votes, and Pierre-Yves Bournazel from Horizons-Renaissance with 11.34%, agreed to merge their lists on Monday afternoon. They aim to unite the right and center against Socialist Emmanuel Grégoire, leading with 37.98%, and a divided left including Sophia Chikirou (LFI) at 11.73%.

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