Paris candidates shocked by after-school care dysfunctions probe

A 'Cash Investigation' report aired on France 2 on January 29 exposes severe dysfunctions in Paris's after-school care, including ignored alerts about suspicious animator behaviors. Several Paris mayoral candidates voice shock and demand inquiries and reforms. The Education Minister announces reports to the judiciary.

France 2's 'Cash Investigation' program, aired on Thursday, January 29, highlighted systemic issues in Paris's after-school care, where over five million children are hosted daily. Testimonies point to low pay, imposed part-time work, and fragmented schedules for animators, along with no recruitment framework. Parents report ignored alerts on suspicious behaviors, such as an animator kissing a child on the mouth in a 7th arrondissement nursery school.

Rachida Dati, LR mayor of the 7th and mayoral candidate, called these images 'unacceptable behaviors' and denounced an 'omerta' and 'systemic dysfunctions'. She demands a global inquiry, an emergency plan against assaults, and a overhaul of municipal activities.

LFI candidate Sophia Chikirou filed a resolution proposal for a parliamentary inquiry, asking: 'Who are the responsible parties? Why have alerts never been followed up?'

At Baudin nursery school in the 11th, a former animator faces trial in May for sexual assault on five children. First deputy Patrick Bloche admits a 'major dysfunction in the reporting process'.

Emmanuel Grégoire, candidate for the left-wing union excluding LFI and PS deputy, expresses 'shock and anger' at these 'unbearable violence situations' and 'unacceptable shortcomings'. A victim of after-school abuse in his youth, he calls for reviewing procedures, controls, and institutional culture.

On Friday, Education Minister Édouard Geffray announced on X reports to the judiciary under article 40 of the penal procedure code, and initiates administrative controls and sanctions: 'One single line: leave nothing unaddressed'. These revelations come ahead of the March 15 and 22 municipal elections.

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Distressed parents protest outside Paris primary school amid sexual assault allegations against after-school animators.
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Sexual assaults by school animators in Paris spark parents' distress

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Around 30 nursery and primary schools in Paris, including ten in the 11th arrondissement, are affected by complaints of sexual assaults mostly committed by after-school animators. Over 50 agents have been suspended in the last three years for such reports. Parents voice their fear and frustration amid the rising cases.

Candidate Pierre-Yves Bournazel stated he would have resigned if he were Paris mayor amid failures exposed by a «Cash Investigation» probe into after-school care. Aired Thursday evening on France 2, the report highlights ignored complaints and inappropriate animator behaviors. Several mayoral candidates reacted with shock and demanded accountability.

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Over recent months, reports of sexual assaults on children in after-school settings have surged in Paris and across France. This sector, serving millions of children under 13 daily, is poorly defined and regulated, complicating efforts to measure the issue. In Paris, 19 animators were suspended in 2025 over sexual misconduct allegations.

Jérémie Patrier-Leitus, president of the parliamentary inquiry commission on public audiovisual, announced he will summon Vincent Bolloré in late February to question him about keeping Jean-Marc Morandini on air despite his conviction for corruption of minors. This comes amid internal tensions in the commission, where deputies denounce a 'witch hunt'.

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In his first major campaign rally on January 14, 2026, Emmanuel Grégoire, head of a left-wing union list in Paris, sharply criticized his rival Rachida Dati, accusing her of wanting to turn the capital into a « facho lab ». Earlier that day, outgoing mayor Anne Hidalgo defended her record without mentioning her former first deputy, stressing that Paris must remain a left-wing city.

Sébastien Lecornu's government survived two no-confidence motions in the National Assembly on Thursday, backed by the Socialist Party in exchange for suspending pension reform. The La France Insoumise motion failed by 18 votes, with 271 in favor against 289 needed. The National Rally motion garnered only 144 votes.

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After several days of intense debates in the National Assembly, the 2026 finance bill increasingly resembles a 'Frankenstein' budget, a patchwork of contradictory amendments complicating its final adoption. The executive, avoiding Article 49.3, faces strong opposition on measures like the surtax on multinationals and limits on sick leave. Lawmakers from all sides have adopted or suppressed key provisions, raising the risk of overall rejection.

 

 

 

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