The Guardian (USA)

Grave issue: France bans discrimina­tion against regional accents

- Kim Willsher in Paris

In France, it’s not what you say, it’s the way that you say it. When the prime minister, Jean Castex, opens his mouth, he is often accused of being “a bit rugby” – he comes from the southwest, where the sport is popular. Others with regional accents sound like “they should be reading the weather”.

Now the French have not only come up with a word for this kind of prejudice - glottophob­ie - but a new law banning it. The Assemblée Nationale has adopted legislatio­n making linguistic discrimina­tion an offence along with racism, sexism and other outlawed bigotry.

The legislatio­n, approved by 98 votes to three, was the subject of acute debate in the house. Among those who voted against was Jean Lassalle, a former presidenti­al candidate, the head of the Libertés et Territoire­s (Freedom and Land) party and a well-known orator.

“I’m not asking for charity. I’m not asking to be protected. I am who I am,” he said in a south-west accent with knife-blunting properties.

The justice minister, Éric DupondMore­tti, whose booming voice is familiar to courtrooms across the land, said he was “super-convinced” of the necessity of the law.

Christophe Euzet, who proposed the law, said accents were a grave matter. “At a time when visible minorities benefit from the legitimate concern of public powers, the audible minorities are the poor cousins of the social contract based on equality,” he said.

Several MPs, including one from French Polynesia and another the daughter of parents repatriate­d to France around Algerian independen­ce in the 1960s, aired their accents. Other parliament­arians complained that many broadcaste­rs with strong regional accents were pigeonhole­d into reporting on rugby matches or delivering the weather.

It is not recorded whether the Moroccan-born, Paris-adopted, hardleft firebrand Jean-Luc Mélenchon contribute­d to the debate, but he can count himself lucky having narrowly escaped potentiall­y facing a €45,000 fine and three years in jail for blatant glottophob­ie. When a journalist with a strong southern accent addressed him recently, he replied: “Can someone ask me a question in French? And make it a bit more understand­able.”

 ?? Photograph: Reuters ?? Jean Castex, the French prime minister, is often accused of sounding ‘a bit rugby’.
Photograph: Reuters Jean Castex, the French prime minister, is often accused of sounding ‘a bit rugby’.

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