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In France, black PR technologies were used against the president's wife

While French President Emmanuel Macron spends his Christmas and New Year's holidays at the summer residence of Fort Bregancon on the Cote d'Azur, a scandal continues in the country. It is caused by rumors widespread in social networks that his wife Brigitte, let's say, is not quite a woman, but more specifically, a transgender.

The first demarche was made a couple of months ago, when the ultra-steamy online magazine Faits & Documents published an article by little-known journalist Natasha Rae. She claims that Brigitte Macron was born under the male name Jean-Michel, but after years she changed her name and gender. At the same time, Rei referred to the fact that for three years she allegedly "conducted an investigation and met with experts," however, without specifying which ones. The mystifier referred to the fact that there are few children's photographs of Brigitte in the public domain, and her personal documents of that time, they say, are "fake".

It seems that this pile of more than dubious conjectures would sooner or later order to live a long time, but social networks came to the rescue, which played the role of an accelerator of this fake. The four-hour interview, which Rey posted on YouTube, gained almost half a million views, and when the hashtag #JeanMichelTrogneux appeared in the French section of Twitter (Tronieu is Brigitte's maiden name), it was supported and distributed around the world by almost 50 thousand users of this messenger. Moreover, the French and not only the media - paper and electronic - did not bypass this scandal, giving it additional acceleration.

Little-known journalist Natasha Rae claims that Brigitte Macron was born under the male name Jean-Michel, but changed her name and gender years later

Brigitte Macron, by the way, is a mother of three children born in her first marriage, as her entourage reported, not today, so tomorrow she will file a complaint against the authors of slanderous fabrications. And they, presumably, did not appear at all by chance now, when the active phase of preparation for the presidential elections begins, which will be held in France in the second half of April of the coming year. And, of course, her husband Brigitte will take part in them, which, most likely, will be announced in the coming weeks.

It is believed here that the murky story with the sex of the companion of the owner of the Elysee Palace is the first, but far from the last, stuffing in the dirtiest traditions of black PR technologies, which are actively used everywhere in order to "correct" in one direction or another the results of elections in countries with a long-standing democratic tradition. It is clear that the local justice will take into consideration the lawsuit of Brigitte Macron's lawyers. However, the consideration of the case and the decision will most likely drag on for many months, when the elections are over long ago. But here's the thing: this dirty story will remain in the minds of voters, and it remains to be seen how it will affect the course of the April voting.

It must be assumed that there will be many more such "technological" slips of the participants in the presidential race in France, as it already happened before the last elections in 2017. Then the main rival of Emmanuel Macron, the leader of the National Front (now the National Unity Party) Marine Le Pen, was subjected to a massive attack in the spirit of black PR. She was accused of posting on her Internet page photographs of the massacre of Islamic State militants (IS, a terrorist group banned in the Russian Federation) with hostages, they say, “disseminated acts of violence”. All explanations that by doing so she wanted to draw attention to the atrocities of radical Islamists were not accepted both during the campaign launched against her in social networks, and at the official level. It was only this summer that the absurd charges were dropped and Marine Le Pen was acquitted.

By the way, quite recently a "black PR label" flew in to one of the presidential candidates - the.jpgted polemicist of right-wing views, 63-year-old Erik Zemmur. Several women reported that he sexually harassed them. They have not yet filed lawsuits against him, but they are actively talking about this on social networks. Look, soon against Zemmur, active actions of nimble political strategists, taking advantage of impunity in conditions when democratic elections turn out to be, in fact, defenseless against black PR, will unfold against Zemmur.

In France, black PR technologies were used against the president's wife