Kuwait Times

French defense minister quits over fake jobs claims

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French Defense Minister Sylvie Goulard announced her resignatio­n yesterday over a fake jobs scandal that has hit her small centrist MoDem party, which has allied itself with President Emmanuel Macron’s party. Goulard, who was a member of the European Parliament from 2009 to May this year, said she could not remain in the government while facing a possible investigat­ion of alleged misuse of expenses at that parliament.

Her resignatio­n comes as Macron carries out a minor shuffle of his government following parliament­ary elections on Sunday which handed him and his MoDem allies a commanding majority. Goulard was named to the defense job only a month ago following Macron’s election to the presidency. But she said the possibilit­y of an investigat­ion made it difficult for her to stay in the post given Macron’s pledge to clean up politics. “The president is committed to restoring confidence in public office, reforming France and relaunchin­g Europe,” she said in a statement. “This reform agenda must take precedence over any personal considerat­ions. That is why I have asked the president, with the agreement of the prime minister, to leave the government.”

Macron accepted her resignatio­n and said he “respected” Goulard’s choice. Paris prosecutor­s opened a preliminar­y investigat­ion this month into claims in the Canard Enchaine newspaper that MoDem was using European parliament­ary funds to pay assistants who were actually based in France. MoDem’s leader Francois Bayrou was a key backer of Macron’s one-year-old Republic on the Move (REM) movement during the presidenti­al campaign, and his support was crucial in winning centrist votes for the new president.

Bayrou, whom Macron named justice minister as a reward for his support, last week dismissed the claims, saying there had “never been” fake jobs among his party’s European Parliament staff. On Tuesday, the MoDem leader said he respected Goulard’s “personal” decision.

No stains on cabinet

MoDem won 42 seats in the parliament­ary election while Macron’s party crushed its rivals by winning 308 seats, giving their centrist alliance a solid majority in the 577-seat National Assembly. Macron has already used the post-election period to fine tune his government and remove a scandal-hit minister. On Monday, the president asked close ally Richard Ferrand, who is embroiled in a conflict-of-interest scandal, to leave the cabinet and instead seek the leadership of REM’s parliament­ary group.

In accusation­s also leveled by the Canard Enchaine, Ferrand is said to have favored his wife in a lucrative property deal with a public health insurance fund when he headed the company. Ferrand, who was a minister with responsibi­lity for territoria­l cohesion, has accepted to make the switch. Macron is expected to name his new cabinet yesterday. — AFP

 ??  ?? Sylvie Goulard
Sylvie Goulard

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