Gavin Mortimer

Gavin Mortimer

Gavin Mortimer is a British author who lives in Burgundy after many years in Paris. He writes about French politics, terrorism and sport.

France is fracturing but Macron remains in denial | 17 October 2018

From our UK edition

As chalices go, few are as poisoned as the one Emmanuel Macron has just handed Christophe Castaner. Minister of the interior is one of the most challenging posts in government. The former Socialist MP has cultivated an image over the years of a political tough guy, in contrast to his predecessor, the diminutive Gérard Collomb. But what passes for tough in the National Assembly won't intimidate the tough guys in France's inner cities. During his eighteen months in the post, Collomb was a diligent minister, but in the end the 71-year-old was worn down by the enormity of his task. He parted with a message that should cause his successor a few sleepless nights.

Why Emmanuel Macron should fear a no-deal Brexit

From our UK edition

Last month I made my annual pilgrimage to the battlefields of the Somme, something I've been doing for 27 years. In that time, the area has changed dramatically: Albert, the small, sleepy town in the heart of the world war one battlefields has been transformed from a decaying backwater into a bustling place with cafes, hotels, shops and a fine world war one museum; although this is nothing compared to the one adjacent to the Thiepval Memorial, opened in 2016. The latter pulls in tens of thousands of visitors each year, predominantly British, most of whom stay at the numerous B&Bs in the outlying villages. The one I stayed in last month was run by a French couple who told me how the region has been regenerated this century by the battlefield tourists.

Fan Bingbing and the tyranny of Twitter

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My first reaction when I read Fan Bingbing's apology for tax evasion was to laugh. Who wouldn't? It was so wonderfully OTT in that unmistakably communist way. 'I have failed my nurturing country,' declared China’s highest-earning actress, who resurfaced this week after disappearing from sight over the summer. 'I have failed society’s trust, and I have failed the love of my fans.' She talked of having 'experienced pain and torture like never before' (a figure of speech, one hopes) but ultimately she had come through her ordeal a better person, thanks to 'the good policies of the [Communist] party and the state'.

Why is Canada letting Isis fighters off lightly?

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What is the difference between the SS and Isis? A big one, it seems, in the eyes of Canada, where this week a federal court refused to review a decision to strip the Canadian citizenship of Helmut Oberlander, a Ukrainian immigrant with alleged ties to a Nazi killing squad in World War II. According to the Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Center (FSWC), Oberlander served as an interpreter in the Einsatzkommando, mobile death squads that swept through Eastern Europe in the early years of the war, liquidating men, women and children, mostly Jews, but also homosexuals, gypsies and communists. It is estimated that the squad Oberlander allegedly belonged to, Einsatzkommando 10a, killed 23,000 civilians during the war.

Macron is quick to take on nationalism. What about Islamism?

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On Sunday, I reached the summit of the col de Riou in the Pyrénées to find a shepherd tending his flock. He asked if I'd seen a bear on my way up through the forest. One of his sheep was missing and he suspected a bear was responsible. I'd seen no sign of one but that got us talking, and I asked what he thought about the government repopulating the Pyrénées with bears. He shrugged and said the time for protesting was past. The bears are here to stay and that was that. One could say the same about Salafists, I reflected that evening, as I read Le Journal du Dimanche. Spread across two pages of the newspaper was an interview with Hakim El Karoui, the author of a report published last week by the Institut Montaigne entitled 'The Fabric of Islamism".

Why Britain’s Jews look to France with fear

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The Jewish New Year begins on Sunday and to mark the festival of Rosh Hashanah, Emmanuel Macron visited the Grand Synagogue in Paris on Tuesday. It was the first time that a president of France has attended and although he didn't give an address (that would breach the laïcité protocol) Macron's gesture was appreciated by the chief rabbi of France, Haïm Korsia. "You are like the Wailing Wall," Korsia told the president. "We confide in you our hopes and our sorrows and although we get no response we know that somebody hears us". Joël Mergui, the president of the Israelite central consistory of France, was more forthright when he spoke. "Our children are leaving," he said, referring to the 20,000 plus Jews who have emigrated to Israel in the last four years.

How Macron is reviving Marine Le Pen’s fortunes

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It says much about Europe's political establishment that Marine Le Pen has been charged over photographs she tweeted in 2015 to illustrate the barbarity of Isis. It was a stupid stunt of Le Pen's, but not one worthy of prosecution and the political martyrdom that will ensue if she is convicted. Le Pen is facing the possibility of three years in prison and a fine of €75,000 (£66,000) because last year the European Parliament voted to strip her of immunity, thereby allowing a French judge to charge her with distributing "violent messages that incite terrorism or...seriously harm human dignity". Meanwhile, as politicians and lawmakers conspire to send Le Pen down for tweeting the photos, the people who did the killing have been able to set up home in Europe.

Sweden must copy France’s approach to Islamic intolerance

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There are 960 miles as the crow flies between Paris and Stockholm, but when it comes to dealing with Islam they are separated by light years. In France this week there has been something of a kerfuffle caused by a Gap back-to-school campaign that features a young girl in a hijab. One female MP from Emmanuel Macron's ruling La République en Marche party said the campaign left her 'sickened,' while Marlène Schiappa, the gender equality minister, has demanded an explanation from Gap, saying: 'You don’t choose to wear the veil at nine to ten years old.' Incidentally, France has looked on in bemusement at Boris Johnson and his comments about the burka.

What happened to Je Suis Charlie, Prime Minister?

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On January 11 2015, I was one of two million people who marched slowly and silently through Paris to honour the memory of the people slaughtered days earlier for being blasphemers and Jewish. It was an extraordinary day, an emotional one, too, soured only a little by the sight of presidents and prime ministers at the head of the march. These were the people who for years had been pretending there wasn't a problem with the rise throughout the West of political Islam. Now, following the murder of the Charlie Hebdo cartoonists and the shoppers in the Kosher supermarket, they had muscled their way to the front to claim they were the standard-bearers of liberty in the fight against an evil ideology.

What happened to Je Suis Charlie, Prime Minister? | 11 August 2018

From our UK edition

On January 11 2015, I was one of two million people who marched slowly and silently through Paris to honour the memory of the people slaughtered days earlier for being blasphemers and Jewish. It was an extraordinary day, an emotional one, too, soured only a little by the sight of presidents and prime ministers at the head of the march. These were the people who for years had been pretending there wasn't a problem with the rise throughout the West of political Islam. Now, following the murder of the Charlie Hebdo cartoonists and the shoppers in the Kosher supermarket, they had muscled their way to the front to claim they were the standard-bearers of liberty in the fight against an evil ideology.

Forced marriage is the MeToo generation’s ‘no go’ subject

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By now you've probably heard of Marie Laguerre. The 22-year-old student was punched in the face last week by a passer-by, a sickening attack that was caught on CCTV and has since gone viral. It's caused uproar around the world, and is being seen as evidence of the physical and verbal abuse with which Frenchwomen have to contend all too often. Laguerre was struck because she gave short shrift to the obscene comments of a man who crossed her path on a busy Parisian street.

What the Benalla scandal reveals about Macron’s failing presidency

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The feel-good factor Emmanuel Macron hoped would surge through France following their World Cup win has failed to materialise. The president milked the success for all it was worth but he has been swiftly brought down to earth with a bump. It was actually more of a thump, administered by his now ex-chief bodyguard Alexandre Benalla, who was caught on camera beating a protestor while dressed as a policeman during a May Day march earlier this year. Since the story broke eight days ago, it has dominated the French media. Had the president's people come clean the day the footage was first broadcast by Le Monde, the story wouldn't have developed in the way that it has.

Can France’s World Cup success help in the fight against Islamists?

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It’s not surprising that so many Frenchmen and women partied in Paris last Sunday to celebrate their country's World Cup success. The French side played with style and panache and deserved their victory; there’s also the fact that France hasn’t had much to cheer about in recent years when it comes to sport so they’re entitled to bask in the glory of Les Bleus. As well as cheers last week there were also some jeers – and spits and slaps – all of them aimed at the British cyclist Chris Froome as he peddled up and down mountains in the Tour de France.

Football, not rugby, is now the gentleman’s game

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Most British sports fans are familiar with the maxim that ‘football is a game for gentlemen played by hooligans, and rugby union is a game for hooligans played by gentlemen’. It was coined more than half a century ago by Arthur Tedder, then chancellor of Cambridge University, and for decades the saying stood the test of time: George Best and Gareth Edwards, Paul Gascoigne and Gavin Hastings, John Terry and Jonny Wilkinson. I rest my case. But something strange has happened in the past season or two. This current crop of footballers, particularly the ones wearing England shirts, are polite and presentable.

Is Jean-Marie Le Pen the patriarch of European populism?

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Jean-Marie Le Pen turned 90 last month and to celebrate he threw a party on Saturday for 350 guests. His three daughters were present, including Marine, whose attendance signalled the end of two years of hostility. The pair fell out when she expelled him from the National Front for repeating his belief that the Holocaust was "a detail of history". The rapprochement between father and daughter is also a political move on her part. Marine Le Pen knows she messed up in last year's presidential campaign by focusing on Frexit when the National Front's strategy should have centred on mass immigration and Islamic extremism. Ahead of next May's European elections, she is going back to the party's basics, and her father's endorsement will help her in that respect.

Meet Macron’s nemesis: the ‘Malcolm X of French Muslims’

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Emmanuel Macron is becoming quite the curmudgeon in attacking those who don't conform to his view of the migrant crisis. The French president has said the Italian government is "cynical and irresponsible", likened populism to "leprosy" and demanded fines be levied against EU states that don't take their share of migrants. The Italians, increasingly exasperated with the French president, have hit back – labelling him a "chatterbox". There is a subject, however, on which Macron has gone uncharacteristically quiet in recent months: Islam. During last year's presidential campaign it was the one issue on which he appeared uncomfortable when challenged by Marine Le Pen.

Macron is restoring France’s dignity

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Has there ever been a time when the leaders of France and Great Britain are so diametrically opposed in character and style? One is weak and indecisive, a Prime Minister who avoids confrontation, the other is forthright and forceful, a president who relishes a fight. Emmanuel Macron seems to take a perverse delight in upsetting his compatriots; one can detect in his behaviour a healthy contempt for a section of French society. These are the slackers to whom he referred in a speech last year, the coasters, the self-entitled, the people he believes have grown up believing the state will look after them, whatever.

For France, the World Cup is about more than just football

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These are challenging times for Emmanuel Macron. Kim Jong-Un has supplanted him as Donald Trump's Best Friend Forever and he's angered the Italians with clumsy comments about their handling of the migrant crisis. Thank goodness, then, that Kylian Mbappé has recovered from an ankle injury and is fit for France's World Cup opener today against Australia. Every president and prime minister would love their boys to win the World Cup but for Macron a victory inspired by Mbappé would be particularly timely. What political capital! Endless photo opportunities and references about the football team mirroring the new diverse, dynamic and blossoming France. Mbappé is, for Macron, the figurehead of this French squad.

Emmanuel Macron’s challenge for French lesbians

From our UK edition

The man who brought France's Socialist Party to the brink of ruin has no sense of shame. In recent weeks, François Hollande has been plugging his memoirs all over the media and even hinting at a political comeback, much to the "exasperation" of his party, who wish the former president would go quietly into the night. The book, The lessons of Power, is rumoured to have been written with the help of a well-known left-wing journalist, but the delusions are all Hollande's. His bitterness towards Emmanuel Macron seeps through the prose, and for every swipe at his successor there is also a claim that France's gradual economic upturn is down to his policies.

Emmanuel Macron’s challenge for French lesbians | 6 June 2018

From our UK edition

The man who brought France's Socialist Party to the brink of ruin has no sense of shame. In recent weeks, François Hollande has been plugging his memoirs all over the media and even hinting at a political comeback, much to the "exasperation" of his party, who wish the former president would go quietly into the night. The book, The lessons of Power, is rumoured to have been written with the help of a well-known left-wing journalist, but the delusions are all Hollande's. His bitterness towards Emmanuel Macron seeps through the prose, and for every swipe at his successor there is also a claim that France's gradual economic upturn is down to his policies.