Retailleau accuses Macron of being hostage to Algerian blackmail

Bruno Retailleau, Republicans leader and 2027 presidential candidate, accused Emmanuel Macron of being a 'willing hostage to Algeria's memorial blackmail' in a JDD interview. He denounces the president's 'ideological dependence' on OQTF expulsions and visa policy. Retailleau sharply criticized Macron's recent remarks on 'madmen' wanting to anger Algeria.

In an interview published on Sunday, May 2, 2026, in Le Journal du Dimanche, Bruno Retailleau, former Interior Minister and Republicans leader, sharply criticized Emmanuel Macron following his remarks during a visit to a hospital in Ariège. The president had referred to 'madmen' wanting to 'get angry with Algeria.' 'This word "madman" has no place in a president's mouth: it betrays a loss of cool-headedness, also contempt,' Retailleau stated.

He accuses Macron of yielding to Algerian pressures, calling it an 'abdication of French pride.' Retailleau denounces Algeria's refusal to take back its nationals under OQTF despite the 1994 agreement. 'Do we protect them by accepting that dangerous individuals under OQTF are not taken back? No, and the Mulhouse attack showed it,' he declares. According to him, Algerians make up over 40% of high-risk profiles in retention centers.

Retailleau dismisses Macron's argument about Algerian doctors in France as a 'false pretext' and criticizes the president's memorial policy, tied to his 2017 speech on colonization. He advocates visa reciprocity: 'proportion the issuance of visas to the level of cooperation from countries of origin on readmissions.' In 2025, France issued over 200,000 visas to Algerians despite scant consular laissez-passer.

He deems the results of dialogue with Algiers 'very weak: fewer than a hundred OQTF executed since the start of the year' and calls to denounce the 1968 Franco-Algerian agreement, 'profoundly unbalanced.' 'France must be respected, and the French protected,' he concludes.

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Bruno Retailleau confidently announces his candidacy for France's 2027 presidential election at a podium with tricolor flag, promising national revival.
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Bruno Retailleau announces his candidacy for 2027 presidential election

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Bruno Retailleau, president of the Republicans, officialized his candidacy for the 2027 presidential election on February 12, 2026, through a video on social media and a letter to his parliamentarians. At 65 years old, he depicts a France in decline and promises to restore order, justice, and national pride. He plans referendums on immigration, justice, and sovereignty.

During a visit to Lavelanet hospital in Ariège, Emmanuel Macron criticized France's administrative system for foreign doctors and attacked candidates using Algeria as a campaign theme. He called 'madmen' those wanting to 'fall out with Algeria'. Bruno Retailleau, Les Républicains president, denounced it as a 'false pretext'.

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Ten days before the first round of the 2026 municipal elections, Bruno Retailleau, president of Les Républicains, denounced from Le Blanc-Mesnil the agreements between La France Insoumise and other left-wing parties in 122 municipalities. He calls these deals 'accords de la honte.' The Socialist Party sees this as a diversion from local alliances between the right and the far right.

Despite criticism from the Dati camp, former prime ministers Edouard Philippe and Gabriel Attal attended a support rally for their candidate Pierre-Yves Bournazel in the Paris municipal elections on Tuesday. The event at the Cirque d’Hiver marks a pause between these rivals eyeing the 2027 presidential race. Bournazel, seen as the 'third man' in polls, advocates for a 'quiet change' in the capital.

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The Rassemblement National (RN) has withdrawn its investiture from candidate Quentin Macullo for the Belfort municipal elections, following the revelation of controversial tweets about newborns' names. Aged 23, Macullo was designated last October but was flagged for a 2022 message deemed racist. This withdrawal is part of a series of disciplinary actions within the far-right party ahead of the March elections.

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