La rédaction de Mediapart

All his articles

  • The 'new' French government, a déjà vu group of Macron loyalists

    France

    One week after the resignation of Sébastien Lecornu as prime minister, and the collapse of his government, President Emmanuel Macron has reappointed Lecornu to lead what is now the fourth minority government since snap elections last year created a hung parliament. As outlined here, its composition, far from being what the presidential office promised as a “rupture” with the past, is largely made up of Macron loyalists and revenants. The bets are already on it being overturned this week in parliament, its future hanging on a decision by the socialists whether or not to support a no-confidence vote.   

  • Sarkozy-Gaddafi funding trial: a serpentine ten-year investigation

    International

    The verdicts and sentences were announced on Thursday at the end of the trial of Nicolas Sarkozy and 11 co-defendants over their roles in the alleged funding of Sarkozy’s 2007 presidential election bid by the Libyan regime of Muammar Gaddafi. The ten-year judicial investigation, and Mediapart’s own investigations over a period of 14 years, have seen ups and downs along the way, and here and there some surprising outcomes. Graham Tearse looks back on the different developments and how the “Gaddafi-Sarkozy funding affair” became an epic legal marathon.

  • Music teacher ‘stabbed in face by student’ at French school

    France — Link

    Security in France's schools has been the subject of intense debate in recent years.

  • Key accuser in Sarkozy Libya case dies on eve of verdict

    France — Link

    Ziad Takieddine, a key accuser of former president Nicolas Sarkozy in the case over alleged illegal campaign financing from late Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi, died Tuesday aged 75, two days before the verdict in the ex-head of state's trial in France.

  • France formally recognises Palestinian state

    International — Link

    President Emmanuel Macron made the announcement in New York where France and Saudi Arabia are hosting a one-day summit at the UN General Assembly focused on plans for a two-state solution to the Middle East conflict. 

  • Defiant French mayors keep Palestinian flags flying

    International — Link

    As France prepares to recognise Palestine at the UN, town halls across the country are caught up in a row over whether or not to raise the Palestinian flag in solidarity.

  • France's richest man, Bernard Arnault, slams proposed wealth tax

    France — Link

    Bernard Arnault, 76, boss of luxury goods firm LVMH, whose net worth is estimated by Forbes at 156 billion dollars, has dismissed a wealth tax demanded by the French leftwing to soften the social blow of proposed budget cuts as a 'desire to destroy the French economy', while he attacked the economist behind the favoured model for the tax as being 'a far-left activist' with 'pseudo-academic expertise'. 

  • French mayors told not to fly Palestinian flag over state recognition

    International — Link

    France's hardline conservative caretaker interior minister, Bruno Ratailleau, has warned mayors intending to fly the Palestinian flag from their town halls to mark France's recognition of a Palestinian state at a UN General Assembly meeting on Monday that they will face legal action.  

  • Bayeux tapestry begins its long path to London for loan display

    International — Link

    The 11th-century work depicting the Norman Conquest of England in 1066 was secretly moved on Friday from its home at the the Bayeux Tapestry Museum in Normandy, but only a short distance as the fargile, 224 feet-long work, believed to be the work of nuns in Canterbury, needs very careful transport before its arrival at the British Museum in London, where it is due to go on display for nine months from September 2026. 

  • Annie Ernaux, Sally Rooney join in call to evacuate Gaza artists

    International — Link

    Nobel prizewinner Ernaux and Irish author Rooney are joined by US-Vietnamese writer and Pulitzer winner Viet Thanh Nguyen, and 17 others to urge French President Emmanuel Macron to reopen a residency scheme for welcoming to France artists from Gaza.  

  • Brigitte Macron to present photos to prove she is a woman

    International — Link

    A lawyer acting for French President Emmanuel Macron and his wife Brigitte said she will produce photographic and other evidence to prove she is a women in a defamation suit case that pits the couple against US rightwing influencer Candace Owen, who has repeatedly claimed Macron's wife was born a man. 

  • Unions claim 1m turnout in French protests, police say half

    France — Link

    UPDATE: French unions leading one-day strikes and demonstrations across France on Thursday in protest against significant cuts announced in public spending, claimed a total of around one million people took to the streets nationwide, while the interior ministry figures said the total was just half of that, with little serious violence reported.   

All his blog posts

Mediapart’s journalists also use their blogs, and participate in their own name to this space of debates, by confiding behind the scenes of investigations or reports, doubts or personal reactions to the news.

La rédaction de Mediapart (avatar)

La rédaction de Mediapart

Mediapart Journalist

576 Posts

29 Editions

  • En hommage au photographe Antoni Lallican

    Blog post

    Le journaliste français est mort vendredi 3 octobre en Ukraine, victime d’un tir de drone. Il couvrait cette guerre depuis le début de l’invasion russe et avait collaboré avec Mediapart à de nombreuses reprises.

  • Jugement Sarkozy : la piteuse diversion contre Mediapart

    Blog post

    Depuis l’annonce de la condamnation à cinq ans de prison ferme avec mandat de dépôt différé de Nicolas Sarkozy, l’ancien président de la République et ce qu’il lui reste de proches multiplient les attaques contre notre journal, à l’origine des premières révélations dans cette affaire. Mise au point de la direction éditoriale.

  • De mi-juillet à mi-août, on se calme et on lit au frais nos séries d’été !

    Blog post

    Pour oublier les vicissitudes de la vie politique française comme les désordres climatiques et géopolitiques du monde, rien de tel que de plonger dans nos séries d’été, compagnonnes idéales du farniente au bord de l’eau ou des pauses rando, ou complices de survie quand on est bloqué au bureau ou dans son appart’ trop chaud. Une série d’histoires, enquêtes et portraits qui sauront renouveler à merveille les discussions de l’apéro.

  • « Personne n’y comprend rien » arrive en VOD

    Blog post

    Le film sur l’affaire libyenne est accessible sur Mediapart à partir du 8 mai. À un tarif avantageux.

  • Podcasts : Mediapart lance un appel à projets

    Blog post

    Mediapart a décidé d’étoffer son offre de podcasts en achetant cette année plusieurs séries d’épisodes. Nous lançons un appel à projets sur le thème de l’addiction.