French public broadcasting faces recurrent criticisms

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.

French public broadcasting, tasked by law with specific missions, faces persistent criticisms that question its legitimacy. These attacks have gained momentum in recent weeks due to the proceedings of the National Assembly's inquiry commission, launched in autumn 2025 by Eric Ciotti's UDR group, allied with the RN. This parliamentary body is scrutinizing the neutrality, operations, and funding of these taxpayer-funded media.

A recurring charge concerns a lack of neutrality. Marine Le Pen, RN leader, stated on CNews that public broadcasting is "colonized by the left and far left." In a September 2025 interview with Le Journal du dimanche, she added: "A public service funded by the French must be impeccably neutral, and it is not." Similarly, RN deputy Anne Sicard from Val-d’Oise accused public media during recent hearings of treating her party as an "enemy."

Other complaints highlight excessive costs and undue state control, though the article examines these without full details due to its paywalled nature. These debates highlight tensions surrounding the legal missions of public broadcasting, often misunderstood.

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Illustration depicting heated controversy in French National Assembly over Alloncle's public broadcasting report, with political criticisms and proposals.
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Alloncle report on public broadcasting sparks criticism and controversy

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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.

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.

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Following the French Public Broadcasting Inquiry Commission's narrow approval last week, rapporteur Charles Alloncle's report—proposing mergers and €1 billion in cuts—has sparked outrage from France Télévisions and Radio France. Its official release, initially planned, is now delayed until Tuesday morning amid escalating tensions.

La France Insoumise announced it would quickly pass a major media anti-concentration law if it takes power in 2027. Jean-Luc Mélenchon singled out media outlets owned by Vincent Bolloré as the first target.

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Some members of the parliamentary commission of inquiry on public audiovisual oppose publishing the 300-page report by deputy Charles Alloncle, due to shocking proposals like merging channels and banning reality TV shows. They criticize its poor quality, tone, and erroneous claims. The vote is scheduled for Monday afternoon.

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