French PM says Macron bodyguard case ‘not a state scandal’

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French President Emmanuel Macron, flanked by Elysee senior security officer Alexandre Benalla (R) visits the 55th International Agriculture Fair (Salon de l'Agriculture) at the Porte de Versailles exhibition center in Paris, France, February 24, 2018. Ludovic Marin/Pool via Reuters

PARIS: France’s prime minister on Tuesday struck back at opposition criticism of President Emmanuel Macron’s response to a video showing his top bodyguard assaulting May Day protesters, saying it was an isolated incident and not a state scandal.

Macron is under fire in the biggest crisis of his tenure after footage emerged of the head of his security detail, Alexandre Benalla, hitting a male protester and dragging away a woman, while off duty and wearing a riot helmet and police tags.

Critics say Macron’s office failed to properly punish Benalla or refer him promptly to judicial authorities, and point to the president’s handling of the case as a sign he has lost touch with ordinary people since taking office 14 months ago.

In heated exchanges in parliament on Tuesday, Prime Minister Edouard Philippe sought to defend the government against calls by the opposition conservatives for a vote of no-confidence.

“An isolated incident carried out by this person … does not constitute a state scandal,” he said after fending off several lawmakers on the issue.

“I understand that there can be questions about the possible proportionality of the decisions taken, but the speed of the decision is not questionable,” he said, referring to the initial suspension imposed on Benalla by the Elysee. “Nothing was hidden, nothing was left out,” he added.

Macron came under further pressure on Monday when the interior minister and a police chief said the presidency told them in May it would deal with the bodyguard.

Benalla had initially been suspended for 15 days and brought back into Macron’s entourage. The French leader fired him on Friday, after the story broke in Le Monde newspaper, and Benalla was placed under investigation on Sunday.

Macron’s chief of staff Patrick Strzoda told a parliamentary probe on Tuesday that he had taken the decision to suspend Benalla after the incident and that Macron was informed while on a trip to Australia.

“I took it alone in my soul and conscience,” Strzoda told lawmakers.