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| A website published a sex video and messages addressed to a woman which was said to have come from the former government spokesman (AFP Photo/Lionel BONAVENTURE) |
Paris (AFP) - Emmanuel Macron's candidate for Paris mayor, Benjamin Griveaux, withdrew from the race over a leaked sex video Friday, in a blow to the French president's party ahead of March local elections.
The
42-year-old MP said he opted to retreat to protect his family after a website
published video excerpts of a man masturbating, accompanied by screengrabs of
racy text messages, which it said came from the former government spokesman.
The images
then spread on social media.
His swift
exit marked a rare moment in a country where a politician's private life has
long been considered out of bounds for the media, although there has been a
hint of changing times.
France's
interior minister vowed legal consequences for the unauthorised posting of the
video, which was claimed by a controversial Russian activist and performance
artist.
"After
despicable attacks, I have decided to withdraw my candidacy," Griveaux
said at AFP headquarters in Paris. "My family does not deserve this.
No-one should ever be subjected to such abuse."
'Hypocrisy'
Russian
performance artist Pyotr Pavlensky told AFP he had put the video online in
order to expose the ex-candidate's "hypocrisy", warning he planned to
post more material on a newly-created "political porn platform".
"Benjamin
Griveaux started his campaign with a monstruous lie, a disgusting hypocrisy, he
used his family, his wife, his children to create a political image and present
himself as an icon for all the fathers and husbands of Paris," he said.
Pavlensky
made global headlines in 2013 after nailing his scrotum to Red Square in
Moscow, and two years later doused the doors of the FSB secret police
headquarters with petrol and set them on fire.
Even after
winning asylum in France in 2017, Pavlensky and his partner in 2018 set fire to
the entrance to the Bastille branch of France's central bank.
Having
earlier told the Liberation newspaper that he got the images from a
"source" who had a consensual relationship with Griveaux, he refused
to divulge any further details about the video's origins.
Interior
Minister Christophe Castaner emphasised it was illegal to post videos without
the consent of their author and warned violations could be punished by
significant fines and up to two years' imprisonment.
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Griveaux is
a close political ally of Emmanuel Macron (AFP Photo/Thibault Camus)
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'How low
will we sink?'
The
ambitious Griveaux helped found the president's Republic on the Move (LREM)
party, but recent polls showed him trailing in third place in Paris, which
Macron won comfortably in the 2017 presidential election.
Macron
tapped Griveaux to be the LREM's Paris mayoral candidate, causing a rift in the
party that led to the president asking rival Cedric Villani to step aside.
Villani
refused, triggering his exclusion from the ruling party.
But with
France unused to the sort of political sex scandals that have ended so many
careers in Britain, there was near universal support from across the spectrum
for Griveaux.
Villani
said the "undignified attack" that led to Griveaux's withdrawal was a
"serious threat to our democracy" and offered his support to the
former candidate, his wife and children.
Prime
Minister Edouard Philippe expressed sympathy for Griveaux while government
spokeswomen Sibeth Ndiaye bemoaned a "campaign of the lowest common
denominator where all blows are allowed".
Socialist
Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo, who leads the race in opinion polls, called for
"the respect of privacy and of people".
Socialist
figure and former culture minister Aurelie Filippetti wrote on Twitter:
"How low will we sink in shame and abomination? We don't leave men to the
dogs now but to rats in the lowest depths of the sewers."
Striking a
different tone was far-right National Rally leader Marine Le Pen who said
Griveaux had behaved "irresponsibly" while saying he could have been
the victim of a "set-up".
'Better
without me'
Wresting
control of the capital would be a huge prize for Macron as he seeks to
consolidate his base ahead of an expected re-election bid in 2022.
It would
also help offset heavy losses he is expected to face in rural areas, where his
policies have met fierce resistance and fired up the "yellow vest"
protest movement.
His
majority in parliament has also been hit by what the government admitted was a
huge mistake when it voted down a proposed bill extending paid leave from work
for parents who have lost a child.
One of
Macron's closest political allies, Griveaux resigned as a junior minister and
government spokesman in March last year to run for mayor.
Griveaux
told AFP he had discussed the issue with Macron late Thursday, and that the
president offered his support "whatever my decision".
As for the
LREM's project for Paris, he said it would continue "better without
me".


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