Marine Le Pen’s party wants France to reopen brothels managed directly by
prostitutes.
The party will soon submit a bill allowing brothels to reopen as cooperatives,
Jean-Philippe Tanguy, a prominent lawmaker from the National Rally, said in a
series of interviews with French media.
“Prostitutes would be empresses in their kingdom,” Tanguy told French radio
station RTL.
He said he has already written a draft text which is also backed by Le Pen.
Brothels were banned in France in 1946. Under French law prostitutes can still
offer their services, but a 2016 law pushed by the Socialist Party punishes
clients with a €1,500 fine.
The proposal has reignited debate in France over legalizing prostitution.
A similar debate has emerged in other EU countries. In Italy, for instance,
politicians from Giorgia Meloni’s governing coalition, are also in favor of
reopening brothels and regulating prostitution but, for now, those proposals
have not been implemented.
French daily Le Monde first reported on Tanguy’s plans.
Tag - Prostitution
LONDON — Senior British government officials on Monday defended the ill-fated
hiring of Peter Mandelson as Britain’s ambassador to Washington despite his
relationship with the late pedophile Jeffrey Epstein.
Mandelson was ousted from his role as Britain’s man in Washington earlier this
year after emails were published which showed him telling the financier he
“thinks the world” of him and was “furious” at his 2008 conviction for
soliciting sex from a minor.
In a grilling by the MPs on the Foreign Affairs Committee Monday afternoon,
Foreign Office Permanent Under-Secretary Oliver Robbins and Cabinet Secretary
Chris Wormald — Britain’s top civil servant — insisted that the government had
not been aware of this specific information at the time of the appointment.
Wormald, who is the head of the civil service, confirmed that there was “no
panel interview” when Mandelson was being considered for the role because the
post was filled through a direct ministerial appointment by Prime Minister Keir
Starmer.
A panel interview would normally be used to ask a candidate if there was
anything in their history that would bring the government into disrepute,
Wormald explained, but Mandelson did not go through this process, and therefore
the question was not directly posed.
Mandelson’s relationship with Epstein did come up during due diligence checks,
Robbins said. But Wormald said the information that ultimately saw Mandelson
ousted from his role was “not available to us at the time that the due diligence
was done.”
Quizzing the pair, Labour MP and committee member Uma Kumaran argued that it
ought to have been foreseen that a “well-publicized friendship with the world’s
most notorious pedophile might be a problem to the government,” while
Conservative MP Aphra Brandreth read out a list of publicly available
information on Mandelson, saying he “kept a notoriously close relationship” with
the pedophile and stayed in his Manhattan townhouse after Epstein had pleaded
guilty.
Brandreth asked: “At what point were questions raised about whether that was
appropriate, and why does it seem that suddenly a small additional bit of
information would tip the balance on that being, at one point deemed appropriate
to then not appropriate?”
Speaking in the House of Commons in September after the sacking, Starmer said
the Mandelson-Epstein relationship was “far different to what I’d understood to
be the position at the point of appointment,” and “had I known then what I know
now, I’d have never appointed him.”
Under questioning by the committee, Robinson confirmed that Mandelson — who has
said he feels “utterly awful about my association with Epstein twenty years ago
and the plight of his victims” — is no longer on the government payroll, but
refused to say if the former ambassador received any settlement following his
exit.
The pair said there had been a “number” of changes to the direct ministerial
appointment system since Mandelson was appointed. Wormald said these reforms
would “effectively replicate what would normally happen in a panel interview,”
introducing a higher degree of scrutiny.
WARSAW — Numerous skeletons have tumbled out of Karol Nawrocki’s closet during
Poland’s presidential election campaign, but the increasingly lurid accusations
about his past aren’t harming his chances — and may even help the populist
right-winger win Sunday’s nail-biter contest.
The political temperature is boiling in the final stretch of the race. Donald
Tusk, Poland’s pro-EU center-right prime minister, has accused the nationalist
Law and Justice (PiS) opposition party of backing Nawrocki’s presidential bid
despite knowing of his links to gangsters and prostitution. The candidate
himself is also suggesting he took part in pitched battles of football
hooligans, playing up his skills as a boxer.
It’s been a sensational escalation from the somewhat surreal accusations against
Nawrocki in the earlier weeks of the campaign. In March it emerged that he had
appeared on a TV show in disguise, blurred out and using a pseudonym, to promote
a book he had written on organized crime and to praise himself.
Matters took a more serious turn this month when the circumstances of Nawrocki’s
acquisition of an apartment from an elderly man in the northern city of Gdańsk
ignited a political controversy. But the accusations that he is linked to the
underworld — which Nawrocki has adamantly denied as a media fabrication — have
ratcheted up the debate over his fitness for the presidency.
POLARIZED POLES
The big question is whether any of this is moving the needle in Poland’s highly
polarized society. Just like his political ally U.S. President Donald Trump,
whom he met earlier in the campaign, Nawrocki is proving adept at deflecting the
accusations against him as fantasies and lies from the liberal camp.
Nawrocki’s campaign in fact shows no signs of buckling under the accusations,
and POLITICO’s Poll of Polls puts the contest on a knife edge, with Nawrocki
polling only one percentage point behind his rival, liberal Warsaw Mayor Rafał
Trzaskowski.
Poland is an important player in the EU and NATO, and the high-stakes election
is being closely watched as a signal about the country’s trajectory. A win for
Trzaskowski would allow Tusk to steer Warsaw back to the heart of the EU
mainstream, whereas Nawrocki as president would be able to scupper much of
Tusk’s reformist agenda.
Nawrocki is drawing parallels between himself and Trump as he hits back against
his critics. “Media slander did not destroy President Trump. It will not destroy
Karol Nawrocki, either,” he said on his campaign’s X account Wednesday. In
addition to meeting Trump, the PiS-backed presidential candidate was also a
speaker at MAGA’s CPAC conference in Poland, held Tuesday in the southeastern
town of Jasionka.
And just like Trump, Nawrocki has a solid base that is impervious to much of the
noise about his past.
“In a deeply polarized society, anything is possible and that is the most
fitting answer as to why this is happening,” said Anna Siewierska-Chmaj, a
political scientist from the University of Rzeszów.
“These scandals may have actually helped Nawrocki since PiS abandoned the
narrative of [his] being a ‘citizens’ candidate’ and closed ranks behind him as
a de facto party candidate. This has put the unconvinced PiS voters firmly
behind Nawrocki.”
PULLING NO PUNCHES
Tusk has pulled no punches in combatting Nawrocki, accusing PiS leader Jarosław
Kaczyński of backing an unsuitable candidate. “You knew about everything,
Jarosław. About the connections with the gangsters, about ‘arranging for girls’
… about the apartment fraud and other matters still hidden. The entire
responsibility for this catastrophe falls on you!” he wrote on X.
The most serious accusations stem from testimony provided to Polish online
portal Onet that Nawrocki had secured prostitutes at a luxury hotel on the
Baltic Sea, where he was working for security. A member of parliament from
Tusk’s party then appeared on television to vouch for the report. “I have
knowledge that all the information presented … in the Onet article is simply
true,” said Agnieszka Pomaska, who represents Gdańsk, the city on the Baltic Sea
where the alleged offences took place.
Karol Nawrocki has a solid base that is impervious to much of the noise about
his past. | Albert Zawada/EFE via EPA
Nawrocki emphatically denies the accusations, says he will sue Onet over the
report, and is hitting back hard against Tusk and Trzaskowski. “Today in Poland
the problem is political prostitution, which wants to give Poland away for
foreign money … Media assistants of Tusk and Trzaskowski will not take away our
victory!” he wrote on X.
Conversely, when it comes to suggestions he was involved in mass brawls
involving as many as 140 football hooligans, far from pushing back Nawrocki has
embraced the notion, playing up his pedigree as a boxer and saying he took part
in “sporting, noble fights.”
Another allegation emerged in a report by Gazeta Wyborcza, a major liberal
newspaper, over Nawrocki’s security clearance — something he needed for his job
as the head of the Institute of National Remembrance, a state agency tracking
Nazi and Communist crimes against Poles.
The report claimed that Nawrocki’s assessment by the ABW counterintelligence
agency was initially negative until the agency’s then-chief — now an aide to
outgoing President Andrzej Duda — overrode it.
Nawrocki’s campaign team had no response to the security clearance issue when
contacted by POLITICO.
But the election campaign attacks haven’t all been levelled at Nawrocki. PiS has
also tried to undermine Trzaskowski, more recently by suggesting he is refusing
to undergo drug testing because he has something to hide.
When asked about that claim on Monday, Trzaskowski replied: “I am surprised that
you are asking this kind of question, because it is Karol Nawrocki who clearly
has a problem. It is like when someone has a car accident — they should examine
themselves, not ask others to do it.”
PiS also said Wednesday that Trzaskowski could be implicated in a complex
“garbage scandal” that has festered for years at Warsaw town hall.
Poland’s National Prosecutor’s Office said it had charged 17 people — some close
to municipal government in the capital — with corruption involving fake invoices
related to the rental of waste management equipment.
Trzaskowski, who has been mayor of Warsaw since 2018, has long denied any role
and sued a PiS-linked newspaper over such allegations two years ago.
TIED TO TUSK
PiS’s main strategy has been to associate Trzaskowski with Tusk’s government,
whose popularity is waning.
An April poll by Opinia24 for private broadcaster Radio Zet showed 51 percent of
Poles giving the government a negative assessment less than two years after it
took power. Only 39 percent of respondents said they were happy with the Tusk
administration.
Monthly surveys gauging the mood in Poland showed supporters of the government
at 34 percent of respondents in April, compared to 40 percent opposed.
“In the final stretch of the election campaign … Donald Tusk is making it clear
that he wants to install his puppet in the presidential palace,” Andrzej Śliwka,
a member of parliament for PiS and an aide to Nawrocki’s campaign, told a press
conference Wednesday.
“Rafał Trzaskowski is Donald Tusk’s puppet, and Tusk wants a politician … who
will be completely subservient to him. That is why Tusk will stop at nothing.”
Siewierska-Chmaj fears the more feverish the campaign becomes, the greater the
risk of an explosive backlash.
“I would say we’re already at a point where this threatens to erupt — even, I
would go so far as to say, into acts of violence. The level of polarization and
mutual animosity is starting to translate into real aggression, and it’s
becoming increasingly clear,” she said.
LONDON — British prosecutors confirmed Wednesday that they have charged
far-right influencer Andrew Tate and his brother Tristan with a host of offenses
including rape and human trafficking.
The Crown Prosecution Service said in a statement that it had authorized charges
against the brothers, who rose to prominence as key figures in the online
“manosphere.”
The pair are currently in Romania where they are subject to a European arrest
warrant issued in 2024 at the request of Britain’s Bedfordshire Police. A
Bucharest court has ordered the pair to be extradited to the U.K. once a
criminal case in Romania concludes.
The CPS confirmed that Andrew Tate, 38, faces 10 charges, including rape, actual
bodily harm, human trafficking and controlling prostitution for gain, relating
to three women.
His brother Tristan, 36, faces 11 charges relating to one woman. They include
rape, actual bodily harm and human trafficking. Both have previously denied
wrongdoing and said any sexual activity was consensual.
A CPS spokesperson said in a statement Wednesday: “We can confirm that we have
authorised charges against Andrew and Tristan Tate for offences including rape,
human trafficking, controlling prostitution and actual bodily harm against three
women.
“These charging decisions followed receipt of a file of evidence from
Bedfordshire Police.
“A European Arrest Warrant was issued in England in 2024, and as a result the
Romanian courts ordered the extradition to the UK of Andrew and Tristan Tate.
“However, the domestic criminal matters in Romania must be settled first.
“The Crown Prosecution Service reminds everyone that criminal proceedings are
active, and the defendants have the right to a fair trial.
“It is extremely important that there be no reporting, commentary or sharing of
information online which could in any way prejudice these proceedings.”
The statement from the CPS comes after the pair were allowed to fly to the U.S.
in February for a controversial promotional tour after being freed from house
arrest in Romania.