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INSIDE FRANCE

Inside France: D-Day memories, paratrooper passport checks and European elections

From the moving D-Day anniversary ceremonies in northern France to the upcoming European elections, via car-washing rules and passport checks for paratroopers, our weekly newsletter Inside France looks at what we have been talking about in France this week.

Inside France: D-Day memories, paratrooper passport checks and European elections
The French Air Force elite acrobatic flying team Patrouille de France perform a flypast above during the International commemorative ceremony at Omaha Beach marking the 80th anniversary of the D-Day landings. Photo by Ludovic MARIN / AFP

Inside France is our weekly look at some of the news, talking points and gossip in France that you might not have heard about. It’s published each Saturday and members can receive it directly to their inbox, by going to their newsletter preferences or adding their email to the sign-up box in this article.

Lest we forget

The 80th anniversary events for the D-Day landings in France have been very moving, recalling an incredible moment in history and made particularly special by the presence of the few surviving veterans who had managed to travel – mostly aged over 100 by now but for whom the memories and the emotion were clearly still fresh. 

D-Day was only the start of course – France was fully liberated by the end of August 1944 but the Nazi regime did not finally fall until May 1945. 

More French civilians died than Allied troops in the weeks around D-Day, mostly killed during the aerial bombardment that destroyed Caen, Cherbourg and many other towns in northern France. They deserve to be remembered too.

For French-speakers, I really recommend this two-part documentary on France Télévisions, which features incredible contemporary film footage. 

Talking France

We talk about D-Day – and its political importance in the context of an increasingly fractured Europe – in this week’s Talking France podcast. But we’re also discussing weird car-washing laws, the things that are likely to get you a scolding in France, plus exactly how the EU’s big travel change will impact your journey. Listen here or on the link below. 

Brexit effect

There’s been a lot of comment about this video of British paratroopers landing in France (recreating the 1944 parachute jumps) then being subject to French passport and customs checks.

Much of the reporting of this event confuses customs and passport rules – pre-Brexit, the UK was a member of the EU but not of the Schengen zone, so passport checks were always a part of the UK-France journey.

Brexit has brought in two changes; firstly arrivals from the UK are now subject to customs checks (hence the presence of the douaniers in the video) – they check what you are bringing in to France, whether it has the correct paperwork, if customs charges have been paid where applicable and confiscate anything that does not meet EU standards – this particularly applies to food, since most animal products cannot be brought into the EU without a veterinary certificate.

The second change is how passports are checked – pre-Brexit this was a simple security check, since Brexit passports of non-EU nationals (with the exception of people who have an EU visa or residency permit) are stamped on entry and exit. This is to ensure that people have not over-stayed their 90-day allowance in the EU Bloc. 

And yes, this applies to everyone – even if you arrive by parachute rather than the more common routes of Eurostar/ Le Shuttle/ cross-Channel ferry/ commercial airline.

What did the EU do for us?

Speaking of the EU, the French will go to the polls on Sunday to vote in the European Parliament elections. Well, some of them will go – turnout is expected to be around 50 percent, a lot lower than for French domestic elections. 

Of those who are planning to vote, a significant number are telling pollsters that they intend to vote on domestic issues – namely giving president Emmanuel Macron an electoral kicking by voting for his rival Marine Le Pen’s party.

The EU often feels remote – but it actually has a big impact on daily life. Every time you go on holiday, apply for compensation for a delayed flight, plug your phone in to charge, close a cookie window on the internet or even open your wallet you can thank/curse the EU for its policies.

Those foreigners who gain French citizenship get not only the right to live in France, but membership of a 27-country club with the right to move freely from Sweden to Spain, Portugal to Poland.

Inside France is our weekly look at some of the news, talking points and gossip in France that you might not have heard about. It’s published each Saturday and members can receive it directly to their inbox, by going to their newsletter preferences or adding their email to the sign-up box in this article.

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INSIDE FRANCE

Inside France: French lose the plot, sports stars speak out and Paris prices fall

From the latest on the increasingly crazy French elections to the powers of a president, the influence of sports stars and the lustre of the Olympics, our weekly newsletter Inside France looks at what we have been talking about in France this week.

Inside France: French lose the plot, sports stars speak out and Paris prices fall

Inside France is our weekly look at some of the news, talking points and gossip in France that you might not have heard about. It’s published each Saturday and members can receive it directly to their inbox, by going to their newsletter preferences or adding their email to the sign-up box in this article.

Losing the plot?

Welcome to another crazy week in French politics – I’m not saying that this election is getting to me, but the other night I dreamed I was having an argument with far-left leader Jean-Luc Mélenchon. I think I need a holiday.

France might need a holiday too – the political discourse is getting increasingly wild, leading to our columnist John Lichfield to declare that the country has “taken leave of its senses”

Latest polling suggests that Marine Le Pen’s far-right Rassemblement National party would take the biggest vote share at 33 percent, followed by the increasingly fragile leftist coalition Nouveau Front Populaire with 29 percent and then Emmanuel Macron’s centrist group with 22 percent. Those figures would give none of the blocks an overall majority, instead leading to a total parliamentary deadlock.

French election breakdown: All the latest from the campaign trail

Earlier this week ‘Article 16 of the constitution’ was trending on French Twitter; this is the one that lays out the powers afforded to the president versus the prime minister, as people tried to work out what – if any – decisions Macron would be able to take in the final three years of his mandate.

READ ALSO: What does a French prime minister actually do

The satirical magazine Le Canard Enchâiné perhaps sums it up best in its cartoon, showing a man about to shoot himself in the head with a gun labelled ‘Rassemblement National’ and saying “We never tried this before”.

The Canard Enchainé’s cartoon as posted on Instagram

Sports stars engaged

On a more positive note, it’s been nice to see France’s biggest sports stars use their platforms to encourage people to vote, and speaking out against hatred and intolerance and in favour of diversity and inclusion.

I could not disagree more with the Spain goalkeeper Unai Simon, who criticised Kylian Mbappé’s call for people to vote against the far right, saying that footballers should “leave politics to other people”.

The whole point of living in a democracy is that politics belongs to everybody. As Mbappé said: “The Euros are very important in our careers, but first and foremost we are citizens and I don’t think we can be disconnected from the world around us.”

And I admit I’m biased about this – I’ve been a fan ever since I saw him make his professional debut at the age of 18 in my then-hometown of Castres – but I was also pleased to see French rugby legend Antoine Dupont taking a stand on another social issue, appearing on the front cover of LGBTQ magazine Têtu to decry homophobia (although the cover photo did rather make him look like he had forgotten his shades and was squinting into bright sunlight).

Talking France

We of course discuss all the election latest with John Lichfield in the latest episode of the Talking France podcast – and in what was perhaps linked to my need for a holiday we’re also discussing places to visit in France this summer.

Amid warnings of over-tourism we’re taking a look at the places predicted to be most crowded this summer – and suggesting some alternatives. Listen here or on the link below.

Fun and Games

It was thought that people might avoid Paris this summer – but the combination of good deals on the Olympic ticket resale site plus travel and accommodation costs dropping back to seasonal norms has seen a flurry of people booking a last-minute trip to the Games.

Personally I always thought the ‘everyone fleeing the capital’ narrative was a little over-played, but it’s been interesting to see that attempted price-gouging has also largely failed – at the start of the year there were Airbnb listings for frankly insane prices (I saw one that was €7,000 for two weeks), while now costs are largely at the summer average.

Paris travel deals to take advantage of as prices fall ahead of Olympics

Wrestling 

If you’re a Games fan I highly recommend the temporary exhibition at Paris’ Musée de l’histoire de l’immigration (a strong contender for the capital’s best museum, in my opinion) on the history of Olympics and their politics.

It also includes this statue which we’re told depicts ‘wrestling’ at the Olympics in antiquity. If you say so . . .

Photo: The Local

Inside France is our weekly look at some of the news, talking points and gossip in France that you might not have heard about. It’s published each Saturday and members can receive it directly to their inbox, by going to their newsletter preferences or adding their email to the sign-up box in this article.

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