Complément d’enquête journalists deny Rachida Dati's accusations

Journalists from France 2's « Complément d’enquête » program denied on Thursday before the parliamentary inquiry commission on public audiovisual the accusations by Rachida Dati of witness bribery. The culture minister had claimed on February 5 that the show attempted to monetize testimony from a vulnerable family member. Tensions within the commission may shift to the judicial arena.

The parliamentary inquiry commission on public audiovisual experienced tension during Rachida Dati's hearing on February 5 at the Assemblée nationale. The culture minister testified under oath that France Télévisions' « Complément d’enquête » program offered money to secure testimony from a vulnerable family member in an investigation about her. She provided no evidence to support these claims.

On Thursday, February 12, the involved journalists testified at the Palais-Bourbon to refute these statements. Presenter Tristan Waleckx stated: « We obviously did not give money, or offer money, to anyone in Mme Dati's entourage, even through a third party. » Beside him, report author Louis Milano-Dupont mentioned receiving a recent email from a close relative of Rachida Dati who recognized themselves in the comments made. This relative affirmed that « Complément d’enquête never offered him money ». This document will be provided to the deputies.

These sworn exchanges highlight ongoing frictions within the commission. The journalists' denials could lead to judicial proceedings, turning the parliamentary debate into a legal matter.

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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.

Searches were conducted on Thursday at Culture Minister Rachida Dati's home, the 7th arrondissement Paris town hall, and the ministry, as part of a corruption probe tied to her European Parliament mandate. Government spokesperson Maud Bregeon defended the minister on Friday, stating she fully belongs in the executive. Dati is presumed innocent and has not commented on the raids.

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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.

In the Paris Court of Appeal's ongoing trial over alleged misuse of European Parliament funds by Front National/Rassemblement National staff, Marine Le Pen was questioned on January 20-21, 2026, rejecting claims of a 'system' of embezzlement and highlighting the European Parliament's prior silence on assistants' roles.

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In the appeal trial of the Front National's European parliamentary assistants, Fernand Le Rachinel, the first defendant questioned, claimed he did not know the contracts were illegal. The 83-year-old former MEP explained that his assistants did work, but not in the proper frameworks. He acknowledged that Jean-Marie Le Pen made the recruitment decisions.

France's education minister, Edouard Geffray, has announced a compensation proposal to the widow of teacher Caroline Grandjean, following an inquiry that found institutional failure after her suicide in September 2025. The case, involving homophobic harassment, has stirred strong emotions in the teaching community. The widow reacted by describing the financial offer as an attempt to silence her.

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Rachida Dati, the Culture Minister and Les Républicains candidate for Paris mayor, is outlining her program on mobility, security, and after-school care. Backed by MoDem, she criticizes current policies and suggests urban transformations for the Seine quays and Rue de Rivoli. Meanwhile, her energetic social media campaign, featuring viral videos, irks the left by highlighting Anne Hidalgo's record.

 

 

 

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