France's public broadcasting sector facing major 'crisis': parlimentary report
After nearly six months and close to 70 interviews, the 551-page report of the commission of inquiry into the "neutrality, operation and financing of public broadcasting" was published on Tuesday morning on the National Assembly website.
The inquiry was launched at the request of the UDR, the small party of Éric Ciotti and an ally of the far-right National Rally (RN).
For UDR member Charles Alloncle, the MP who presented the report, French public broadcasting is in "crisis" owing to a lack of neutrality and oversight, conflicts of interest, and excessive costs.
He writes that the country's "public broadcasting system is ill-suited to the challenges of our time," and calls for a "total or partial overhaul" of the sector's major institutions, beginning with France Télévisions and Radio France.
The report's 69 recommendations would deliver savings of more than €1 billion from the €4 billion in state funding that currently supports France Télévisions, Radio France, and France Médias Monde — the group that encompasses France 24, RFI, and MCD.
Among the most significant proposals: the abolition of children's channel France 4, the merger of France 2 and France 5, the merger of franceinfo and France 24, and the consolidation of the France 3 Régions and ICI television and radio networks.
Duty of neutrality
Other recommendations include greater regulation of public broadcasting employees' online activity on social media, by establishing "a duty of neutrality" similar to that required of judges.
A breach of this duty would then be subject to disciplinary action.
"When you are committed to a mission as demanding as public service, you must serve the public interest and set aside your personal convictions more than if you worked for the private sector," he said in the report.
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He also wants to reinstate the appointment of the heads of France Télévisions and Radio France by the President of the Republic and have these entities depend on the president's office rather than the Ministry of Culture.
Alloncle also suggests reducing the budget allocated to games and entertainment on public television by three-quarters and cutting the sports budget of France Télévisions by a third, in a bid to maintain public assets and reduce the national debt.
The MP cites examples of what he calls "activist bias" and "targeted and deliberate hostility" toward the RN among certain figures on public television and radio, and "humour used as a form of activist expression." The rapporteur of the National Assembly enquiry committe on the neutrality, operation, and funding of public broadcasting, UDR's MP Charles Alloncle, on 17 December, 2025.
Among the "dysfunctions," "the most serious is unequivocally the disengagement of the supervisory and oversight authorities, which has allowed this public service to suffer abuses," in reference to the French state and the Court of Auditors.
The report – adopted by a narrow margin last week – was met with anger from several MPs who criticised Alloncle's tone used in the text and denounced the presence of "lies" and "defamatory remarks".
For his part, the chairman of the inquiry committee, Horizons MP Jérémie Patrier-Leitus, accused Alloncle of "discrediting the sector" and wanting to "prepare public opinion" for the privatisation of public broadcasting, a move desired by his allies in the National Rally.
Speaking on ICI radio in Brittany on Tuesday, MoDem MP Erwan Balanant, who was a member of the inquiry committee, pointed to "a desire to dismantle public broadcasting." He announced that he planned to publish a counter-report "before the summer."
'Missed opportunity'
French Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu called the report a "missed opportunity".
"Let's be clear: this report unfortunately misses the point," Lecornu wrote on social media platform X. "Reforms will be necessary" but they must "respond to a vision."
For the president of France Télévisions, Delphine Ernotte Cunci, it is "a biased report, built on insinuations, approximations, and falsehoods".
"All this to end up here?(...) to a text which claims to strengthen public broadcasting by proposing its historic weakening," she wrote on X.
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The president of the RN Jordan Bardella reaffirmed his promise of "privatisation" if his party comes to power, an implementation which experts have said would be very complex.
Alloncle hopes to incorporate part of his report into a bill. He would like the issue of conflicts of interest to be on the agenda for the UDR party's allotted time slot in the National Assembly on 25 June.