'I really want to piss them off': French President Macron's vulgar 'insult' to unvaccinated people draws condemnation



French President Emmanuel Macron on Tuesday said in regard to unvaccinated people that "I really want to piss them off." His opponents openly condemned his statement as inappropriate language ahead of the presidential election just four months away, Reuters reported.

What are the details?

"The unvaccinated, I really want to piss them off. And so, we're going to continue doing so, until the end. That's the strategy," Macron told newspaper Le Parisien in an interview, Reuters said.

In 2021, France enacted a health pass preventing those lacking a negative PCR test or proof of vaccination to enter restaurants, cafes, and other venues, the outlet noted, adding that French officials want a vaccine passport that only vaccinated people can have.

Macron said he won't "vaccinate by force" the 5 million who haven't received the jabs, but plans on "limiting as much as possible their access to activities in social life," the BBC reported in reference to his interview.

"I won't send [unvaccinated people] to prison," Macron added, according to the BBC. "So we need to tell them, from 15 January, you will no longer be able to go to the restaurant. You will no longer be able to go for a coffee, you will no longer be able to go to the theatre. You will no longer be able to go to the cinema."

The BBC also said Macron "used the vulgar term 'emmerder' to say how he wanted to stir up the unvaccinated." The expression is from the word "merde" (s**t) that can be translated as "to get on their nerves" and is considered "very informal" by the French dictionary Larousse — and its use elicited criticism from Macron's rivals, Reuters reported.

'A president shouldn't say that'

"A president shouldn't say that," conservative leader Marine Le Pen said on Twitter, according to Reuters. "Emmanuel Macron is unworthy of his office."

Republicans candidate Valérie Pécresse said she was incensed that Macron accused unvaccinated people of not being citizens, BBC News said, citing CNews: "You have to accept them as they are — lead them, bring them together, and not insult them."

Another conservative, Bruno Retailleau, told BBC News that "Emmanuel Macron says he has learned to love the French, but it seems he especially likes to despise them."

Reuters said Macron previously has been chastened for off-the-cuff remarks which many in France said were arrogant, cutting, or scornful — and the president on several occasions expressed remorse for his words.

Anything else?

Macron told Le Parisien he "would like to" run for re-election in April, but didn't formally announce his candidacy, Reuters said, which added that he's a "clear favorite in the polls."

VIDEO: Man slaps face of French President Emmanuel Macron; security quickly takes him down



French President Emmanuel Macron was slapped in the face by a man he greeted on the other side of a security barrier during a Tuesday visit to the southeastern region of the country, Reuters reported.

What are the details?

Video of the incident shows Macron, dressed in a white dress shirt, extending his arm toward a man dressed in a green shirt. Suddenly the man slaps Macron's left cheek, and security swiftly takes the culprit down.

Hombre abofetea al presidente Emmanuel Macron youtu.be

Reuters said prior to delivering the slap, the man could be heard shouting "A Bas La Macronie," which means "Down with Macronia." The outlet added that the man also shouted "Montjoie Saint Denis" — the battle cry of the French armies when the country was still a monarchy.

While Macron was ushered from the spot of the slap, he remained near the crowd for a few more seconds and also appeared to talk to someone on the other side of the barrier, Reuters said.

Two 28-year-old men — the man who slapped Macron and another accompanying him — were in police custody at 1:45 p.m. for alleged violence against a person holding public authority, CNN reported, citing the prosecutor's office of the city of Valence.

The identity and motive of the man who slapped Macron were unclear, Reuters reported.

Macron's visit involved meeting restaurateurs and students to discuss life returning to normal amid COVID-19, Reuters also said. Bars and restaurants will be able to reopen to indoor customers after seven months of closure, BBC News reported, adding that France's overnight curfew on Wednesday is being pushed back from 9 p.m. to 11 p.m.

BBC News also said Macron had just visited a hotel school in Tain-l'Hermitage and that his visit to the area was set to continue Tuesday.

Other politicians react

Politicians have denounced the slap, BBC News reported.

Prime Minister Jean Castex told the National Assembly that while democracy means debate and legitimate disagreement "it must never in any case mean violence, verbal aggression, and even less physical attack," the network said.

Far-left leader Jean-Luc Mélenchon tweeted his "solidarity with the president" after the incident, BBC News said, while far-right leader Marine Le Pen — a prominent Macron rival — said that "while democratic debate can be bitter, it can never tolerate physical violence."