The Prague Post - Immigration 'flooding' remark row piles pressure on French PM

EUR -
AED 4.19349
AFN 81.586285
ALL 98.81662
AMD 444.02402
ANG 2.057679
AOA 1046.9414
ARS 1259.297851
AUD 1.781488
AWG 2.055064
AZN 1.939171
BAM 1.958111
BBD 2.30492
BDT 138.703693
BGN 1.957717
BHD 0.430278
BIF 3394.520947
BMD 1.141702
BND 1.496967
BOB 7.888309
BRL 6.506506
BSD 1.141547
BTN 97.45301
BWP 15.595405
BYN 3.735909
BYR 22377.366892
BZD 2.293106
CAD 1.578837
CDF 3282.39378
CHF 0.938097
CLF 0.027968
CLP 1072.969462
CNY 8.348469
CNH 8.317782
COP 4903.897201
CRC 574.077504
CUC 1.141702
CUP 30.255113
CVE 110.394316
CZK 25.020431
DJF 203.289915
DKK 7.465752
DOP 67.800015
DZD 151.144226
EGP 58.132176
ERN 17.125536
ETB 153.193393
FJD 2.572026
FKP 0.853494
GBP 0.858046
GEL 3.12787
GGP 0.853494
GHS 17.579747
GIP 0.853494
GMD 81.0609
GNF 9884.665495
GTQ 8.793378
GYD 238.83186
HKD 8.858577
HNL 29.594927
HRK 7.540028
HTG 149.146016
HUF 409.179282
IDR 19266.056617
ILS 4.186782
IMP 0.853494
INR 97.527873
IQD 1495.464889
IRR 48079.946747
ISK 144.916979
JEP 0.853494
JMD 180.43294
JOD 0.809693
JPY 161.683337
KES 147.781925
KGS 99.185441
KHR 4569.392618
KMF 490.362012
KPW 1027.465433
KRW 1623.63744
KWD 0.349567
KYD 0.951323
KZT 592.101368
LAK 24680.126518
LBP 102284.912647
LKR 342.153797
LRD 228.319454
LSL 21.20092
LTL 3.37115
LVL 0.690604
LYD 6.205269
MAD 10.566778
MDL 19.623158
MGA 5181.114548
MKD 61.619595
MMK 2396.742711
MNT 4043.362415
MOP 9.123868
MRU 45.241392
MUR 51.353484
MVR 17.587951
MWK 1979.536171
MXN 22.330386
MYR 5.013224
MZN 73.068849
NAD 21.20092
NGN 1837.158757
NIO 42.009578
NOK 11.893121
NPR 155.925017
NZD 1.906842
OMR 0.439574
PAB 1.141547
PEN 4.221582
PGK 4.655453
PHP 64.567866
PKR 320.667639
PLN 4.293526
PYG 9131.696888
QAR 4.179095
RON 4.978395
RSD 117.388537
RUB 94.510229
RWF 1629.623217
SAR 4.282391
SBD 9.518353
SCR 16.308963
SDG 685.589712
SEK 10.94034
SGD 1.496167
SHP 0.897199
SLE 25.973893
SLL 23940.909779
SOS 652.369901
SRD 42.082
STD 23630.934435
SVC 9.988788
SYP 14844.354824
SZL 21.208122
THB 38.085474
TJS 12.157748
TMT 4.007375
TND 3.418835
TOP 2.673979
TRY 43.714009
TTD 7.754151
TWD 37.096225
TZS 3071.179588
UAH 47.672644
UGX 4184.938901
USD 1.141702
UYU 48.126797
UZS 14702.351139
VES 93.230418
VND 29678.553691
VUV 138.143005
WST 3.16391
XAF 656.732049
XAG 0.034848
XAU 0.000344
XCD 3.085508
XDR 0.817083
XOF 656.72629
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.002538
ZAR 21.230578
ZMK 10276.69518
ZMW 32.392228
ZWL 367.627705
  • RBGPF

    1.2500

    64.7

    +1.93%

  • RYCEF

    0.0700

    9.65

    +0.73%

  • GSK

    0.5200

    37.15

    +1.4%

  • CMSC

    0.1900

    22.07

    +0.86%

  • RELX

    -0.6800

    52.42

    -1.3%

  • RIO

    1.6300

    61.25

    +2.66%

  • SCS

    0.3050

    9.925

    +3.07%

  • BTI

    -0.5800

    42.22

    -1.37%

  • NGG

    -2.8300

    71.52

    -3.96%

  • BP

    -0.0800

    28.79

    -0.28%

  • VOD

    -0.2450

    9.335

    -2.62%

  • AZN

    1.1500

    69.02

    +1.67%

  • CMSD

    0.2060

    22.216

    +0.93%

  • BCC

    3.3750

    96.405

    +3.5%

  • BCE

    -0.1050

    22.145

    -0.47%

  • JRI

    0.2500

    12.59

    +1.99%

Immigration 'flooding' remark row piles pressure on French PM
Immigration 'flooding' remark row piles pressure on French PM / Photo: Thomas SAMSON - AFP

Immigration 'flooding' remark row piles pressure on French PM

Prime Minister Francois Bayrou was at risk on Wednesday of losing the little tacit opposition support he relies on in parliament after suggesting that immigrants were "flooding" France.

Text size:

Bayrou sparked an angry outcry from the leftist opposition, as well as rebukes from centrist allies, when he said Monday that immigration was "a positive" so long as it remained "proportionate" to the size of the population.

"As soon as you get the feeling of flooding, of no longer recognising your own country, its lifestyle and its culture, rejection appears," he said.

While Bayrou won applause from immigration hardliners in the government, including Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau and Justice Minister Gerald Darmanin, as well as the far right, the comments were widely condemned by the opposition on the left.

Crucially, this includes the Socialists with whom Bayrou has been manoeuvring carefully to build bridges in the hope that they will not join efforts to bring his minority government down in any coming no-confidence vote in parliament.

The strategy of prising the centre-left Socialist lawmakers away from their alliance with the hard-left France Unbowed (LFI) party bore fruit earlier this month, when they declined to back an LFI-sponsored no-confidence motion against the prime minister.

Bayrou has been hoping that they will save him again when he presents his government's long-overdue budget plan, a milestone for his government after parliament sacked the previous cabinet under prime minister Michel Barnier over its austerity budget.

- 'Needlessly caused hurt' -

But angered by Bayrou's "flooding" remarks -- which he repeated in parliament on Tuesday and defended again in a message to the Senate Wednesday -- some Socialists have demanded that he take them back or else face losing their support.

"It is in the interest of the country that he take back these words that have needlessly caused hurt," said Socialist deputy Philippe Brun, saying the prime minister's statement had been "out of line".

To back up their threat, the Socialists abruptly cancelled a scheduled meeting with the government about the budget as part of preparations towards a final draft.

Government spokeswoman Sophie Primas urged against "any kind of hostage-taking over the budget", saying the French had "no interest in this battle of words".

But Johanna Rolland, a prominent Socialist and mayor of the western city of Nantes, called on her party colleagues to "firmly consider" voting against Bayrou in a likely no-confidence vote following his budget plan.

While the leftist opposition demanded that Bayrou walk back his remarks, the far-right National Rally (RN) -- the biggest single party in parliament -- said he needed to take action to back up his statements.

"The RN cannot be bought with words," party vice president Sebastien Chenu said, calling on Bayrou to "tackle the cost of immigration" by reducing a public aid programme for immigrants.

- 'Semantic quarrel' -

Some of Bayrou's backers pleaded with the Socialists to cut him some slack for the good of the country.

"People have had enough of this chaos," said one leading member of the Bayrou-founded centrist MoDem party, in reference to recent political instability in France that has seen four different prime ministers in only 12 months.

"We are gambling away the institutional future of this country over a semantic quarrel," added public sector minister Laurent Marcangeli.

A poll published Wednesday suggested that most French people think Bayrou's assessment of immigration is correct.

Some 74 percent of just over 1,000 respondents for the poll, by the Elabe institute for the BFMTV broadcaster, said they agreed with the idea "that there is today in the French population a feeling of 'migration flooding'."

According to France's national statistics agency INSEE, there were around 5.6 million foreigners living in France in 2023, representing 8.2 percent of the overall population, against 6.5 percent in 1975.

X.Kadlec--TPP