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.
Charles Alloncle's report for the parliamentary inquiry commission recommends sweeping reforms for France Télévisions, Radio France, Arte France, France Médias Monde, and INA, including merging France 2 and France 5, and opening France Inter’s airwaves to opinion press editorialists. Aimed at saving €1 billion (over a quarter of the budget), it seeks to revive the ORTF motto: “Informer, cultiver, divertir.”
A former executive warns that such cuts would 'kill public service,' while industry figures predict channels losing 90% of content if implemented. France Télévisions opposes merging France 2 and France 5, defending the latter as essential for documentaries and discovery.
Commission president Jérémie Patrier-Leitus pushes for a full merger of France Télévisions and Radio France to create a 'strong and sovereign' broadcaster. He has criticized the inquiry process as lacking civility. Alloncle, facing a complaint on X, decries leaks and confirms the Tuesday publication delay.
Adopted after narrowly escaping censure, the report lambasts public broadcasting's 'culture of irresponsibility' and conflicts of interest. The debate's heat was evident when France Inter unusually cited a Figaro article on the proposals.