Top Macron minister defends appearance on PLAYBOY cover amid riots

Top Macron minister poses for PLAYBOY: Ex erotica author Marlène Schiappa, 40, hits out at ‘hypocrites’ slamming her 12-page magazine spread on women’s and gay rights – as protest chaos grips France

  • Marlène Schiappa has given a 12-page interview to the French edition of Playboy
  • It comes amid widespread strikes and riots over the unpopular pension reforms 
  • Schiappa defended her decision despite irritating government colleagues 

One of Emmanuel Macron’s top government ministers has defended her appearance on the front cover of Playboy as France is engulfed by strikes and riots in the wake of the president’s controversial pension reforms.

Marlène Schiappa, a 40-year-old former erotica author, will appear fully clothed on the April cover of the French edition of the magazine. She also gave it a 12-page interview on women’s and gay rights.

The minister for the social economy and French associations has hit out at ‘hypocrites’ criticising her after she irritated government colleagues, including her boss prime minister Elisabeth Borne, with her appearance in the magazine.

France has been swept by violent riots after president Macron announced he would raise the retirement age from 62 to 64 without a parliamentary vote.

Millions have taken to the streets of Paris and other cities, with some gangs involved in running battles with police. 

Marlène Schiappa has vehemently defended her appearance on the front cover of Playboy (pictured)


Schiappa slammed ‘hypocrites’ who criticised her appearance on the front cover of the French edition of Playboy

Her interview with the notorious magazine comes amid the country battling widespread riots. Pictured: Protesters set fire to bins on March 28

Gerald Darmanin, France’s interior minister, said the aim of some of the protesters is ‘to bring fire and blood to France’. 

Shocking footage has captured riot police charging protesters, while garbage bins have been set alight and shop windows have been smashed up.

With parliament in revolt, Macron now faces the fallout from Schiappa becoming the first female politician to appear in the Playboy magazine. 

The self-proclaimed ‘sapiosexual’ reportedly agreed to give the interview to discuss women’s rights, feminism, violence against women as well as politics. 

After a backlash, Schiappa defended her decision, tweeting: ‘Defending the right of women to do what they want with their bodies: everywhere and all the time.

‘In France, women are free. Whether it annoys the retrogrades and hypocrites or not.’ 

Ms Borne, only the second woman to be French prime minister, called Schiappa to tell her that it ‘was not at all appropriate, especially in the current period,’ an aide told AFP.

Green MP and fellow women’s rights activist Sandrine Rousseau, an outspoken critic of the centrist government, told French news channel BFM on Saturday: ‘Where is the respect for the French people?

‘People who are going to have to work for two years more, who are demonstrating, who are losing days of salary, who aren’t managing to eat because of inflation?

The 40-year-old former erotica author, will appear fully clothed on the cover of the French edition of the magazine after giving a 12-page interview to the notorious magazine on women’s and gay rights

With the country in turmoil, Macron now faces the fallout from Schiappa (pictured) becoming the first female politician to appear in the Playboy magazine

French Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne (pictured) called Schiappa to tell her that it ‘was not at all appropriate, especially in the current period’

‘Women’s bodies should be able to be exposed anywhere, I don’t have a problem with that, but there’s a social context.’

Playboy joined also defended the interview. Editor Jean-Christophe Florentin insisted the minister was the ‘most Playboy compatible’ of government ministers ‘because she is attached to the rights of women and she has understood that it’s not a magazine for old machos but could be an instrument for the feminist cause’.

‘Playboy is not a soft porn magazine but a 300-page quarterly “mook” (a mix of a book and a magazine) that is intellectual and on trend,’ Florentin added, while admitting there were ‘still a few undressed women but they’re not the majority of the pages’.

Schiappa, a regular on French TV talk shows, brought in legislation outlawing catcalling and street harassment while equalities minister in 2018.

Along with several books on feminism, the mother-of-two has published a dozen erotica books under the pen name Marie Minelli. 

Her books include Dare to Have a Female Orgasm, Indecent Marriage and Good Girls Don’t Swallow. 

President Macron (pictured with Schiappa) also drew criticism for being interviewed about political power and pensions in a children’s magazine last week

She also penned a 2010 book that offered sex tips for the overweight which some critics saw as propagating stereotypes.

Macron, who rarely gives interviews to the French press, has also drawn criticism for the timing of a long interview on political power and pensions which was published in children’s magazine Pif, le Mag last week. 

Jean-Luc Mélenchon, the Leftist leader, joked on Twitter: ‘In a country where the president speaks in Pif and his minister Schiappa in Playboy the problem would be the opposition. France is going off the rails.’ 

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