French Senator doesn't hold back in denouncing Trump and his administration

Source: Raw Story · Bias: Far Left

Summary

French Senator Claude Malhuret, described by the New York Times as "Trump's European nemesis," delivered a scathing indictment of President Donald Trump's second-term administration on Wednesday. Malhuret criticized Trump's cabinet appointments, characterizing them as unqualified and serving personal interests. He linked the Iran war to Trump's appearance in the Epstein files and condemned Congress for failing to impeach Trump for alleged constitutional violations. Malhuret invoked a Turkish proverb stating that when a clown enters a palace, the palace becomes a circus. He documented Trump's alleged pattern of self-dealing across multiple countries, referencing Qatar investments and market manipulation benefiting select insiders. Malhuret argued such conflicts of interest would trigger immediate impeachment proceedings in France but remain unaddressed in the United States. He expressed dismay that Congress has not pursued removal despite what he characterized as clear violations of law and constitutional duty.Watch the video below. Your browser does not support the video tag.

Related Coverage

Daily Analysis

Read the full Parallax Pulse for March 27, 2026 — an AI-powered analysis of how Left and Right media covered the biggest stories this day.

More Headlines From March 27, 2026

French Senator doesn't hold back in denouncing Trump and his administration
Raw Story

French Senator doesn't hold back in denouncing Trump and his administration

Far Left

French Senator Claude Malhuret, described by the New York Times as "Trump's European nemesis," delivered a scathing indictment of President Donald Trump's second-term administration on Wednesday. Malhuret criticized Trump's cabinet appointments, characterizing them as unqualified and serving personal interests. He linked the Iran war to Trump's appearance in the Epstein files and condemned Congress for failing to impeach Trump for alleged constitutional violations. Malhuret invoked a Turkish proverb stating that when a clown enters a palace, the palace becomes a circus. He documented Trump's alleged pattern of self-dealing across multiple countries, referencing Qatar investments and market manipulation benefiting select insiders. Malhuret argued such conflicts of interest would trigger immediate impeachment proceedings in France but remain unaddressed in the United States. He expressed dismay that Congress has not pursued removal despite what he characterized as clear violations of law and constitutional duty.Watch the video below. Your browser does not support the video tag.