Najat Vallaud-Belkacem, former Socialist Minister of Education under François Hollande and recently appointed as an advisor to the Court of Auditors, has been formally reprimanded by her superiors for participating in a political campaign in favor of the mass regularization of illegal immigrants. Such a sanction is extremely rare in France.
Vallaud-Belkacem was appointed to the Court of Auditors last summer despite lacking specific experience in public auditing, a position traditionally reserved for technical profiles. Her appointment was seen as another example of the disproportionate influence that the left maintains in the senior civil service, regardless of electoral outcomes.
However, not even that internal network could shield her this time. According to Le Point, the Court of Auditors’ ethics committee reprimanded her for breaching her duty of discretion by publicly promoting—from her official position—the proposals of the NGO France Terre d’Asile, of which she herself is president.
The organization presented a migration plan advocating for a reduction in deportation orders and the regularization of 250,000 illegal immigrants, claiming that this would generate an additional €2.9 billion per year. Vallaud-Belkacem endorsed these figures with the authority of her office and called for “political courage to reconcile fraternity and economic efficiency.”
For the President of the Court of Auditors, Pierre Moscovici—also a long-time Socialist leader—the former minister crossed a red line. He reminded that the institution “imposes a duty of reserve” on its members and that statements of this kind, amid the parliamentary battle over cuts and the budget, are “out of place.”
The left and sympathetic media have attempted to frame the criticism as attacks based on “origin” or “gender,” but the reprimand reveals another reality: the narrative that immigration automatically brings benefits is no longer accepted without challenge, even in senior offices traditionally dominated by the left.
Although the sanction will not go beyond a formal reminder, its symbolic value is immense. It is the first time that a figure of this level—former minister, Socialist leader, and beneficiary of the French state’s corporate system—has been publicly corrected for treating as dogma what is merely political activism: that illegal immigration must be accepted and promoted.
