The conviction of Marine Le Pen
Barred from public office for five years, France’s presidential front-runner is committed to fighting her prosecutor.
ByRead the New Statesman’s latest comment, long-read features and analysis on France.
Barred from public office for five years, France’s presidential front-runner is committed to fighting her prosecutor.
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The extremist founder and former president of the National Front has died at 96.
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The country’s malaise is grinding, long-term and has few exit routes.
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The team answer listener questions.
For all their faults, Emmanuel Macron and Giorgia Meloni are the few EU politicians prepared for the US president’s return.
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Following the no-confidence vote in Michel Barnier’s government, can the president survive this political crisis?
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During its membership, the UK exerted a disproportionately strong influence on EU legislation, often in subtle ways.
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A row over the budget could see total governmental collapse
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These are the last days of the Macron project.
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Emmanuel Carrère found a story of liberal renewal in the country’s 2015 terrorism attacks. But is it true?
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Over a single night in 2015, terrorists killed 130 people in Paris. In Emmanuel Carrère’s account of the ensuing trial,…
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The horror of the mass rape trial in France has shaken the world.
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When monstrosities like the Dominique Pelicot case are revealed, the general love I feel for men seems suddenly starkly absurd.
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The European Commission president has let a personal rivalry sour the relationship between Germany and France.
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The French president’s calculation may appease Marine Le Pen but it risks mutiny on the left.
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French rioters have ballot-box representation; English rioters have no leader.
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According to Emmanuel Macron, the best analysis of the dangers facing the continent today comes from a French historian who…
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Donald Trump and Emmanuel Macron have come to personify the chaos of the countries they seek to rule.
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Fights over the budget and a growing debt problem promise a difficult autumn.
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Political chaos, confusion and incompetence are almost inevitable after no single grouping wins a parliamentary majority.
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