French President Emmanuel Macron acknowledged on Sunday the shortcomings of his presidency in handling a scandal involving his top bodyguard, ordering the reorganization of his private office to prevent it from happening again, a source close to the Elysee revealed. The scandal broke out when footage emerged of Alexandre Benalla beating up a protester during a May Day rallies. He was placed under investigation on Sunday in a case that has sparked a political storm and brought the sharpest criticism Macron has faced since taking power 14 months ago. Le Monde newspaper released a video last week showing Benalla at the May 1 protests in Paris wearing a riot helmet and police tags while off duty. In the footage, he can be seen dragging a woman away from a protest and later beating a male demonstrator. On Friday, French media released a second video which showed Benalla also manhandling the woman. Macron fired Benalla, the head of his personal security detail, on Friday but faced criticism for failing to act sooner. Benalla had initially been suspended for 15 days before being allowed to return to work. Macron met several members of his government on Sunday to discuss the case, the source said. “The president said the behavior of Alexandre Benalla on May Day was unacceptable, shocking, and that he could not allow the idea that someone in his entourage can be above the law,” the source said. It was the first time Macron was reported to have commented on the case. Acknowledging a series of malfunctions at the Elysee palace since May Day, Macron asked the secretary-general of the presidency, Alexis Kohler, to work on a reorganization of his private office. Lawmakers have launched a parliamentary inquiry into the incident, the lenient initial punishment and the failure of the authorities to report Benalla promptly to the judiciary. Interior Minister Gerard Collomb told lawmakers on Monday that he did not inform Macron about the video and that he was informed of its by his staff on May 2. He said it was not his role to inform prosecutors about the assault. "They said they had already informed the police and alerted the presidents cabinet, which was appropriate because its up to the proper hierarchy to take all necessary measures, whether administrative or legal," he told the parliamentary commission. He only brought it up with the president after Le Monde released the footage on Wednesday. "I never mentioned during our meetings with the president the Benalla case," he said. Collomb is to be questioned by the Senate on Tuesday. Paris police chief Michel Delpuech is scheduled to appear before the parliamentary panel later Monday. Critics of Macron said the incident reinforced perceptions of a lofty, out-of-touch president, following controversies over government spending on official crockery, a swimming pool built at a presidential retreat, and cutting remarks by the president about the costs of welfare. After winning the presidency last year at the head of a new political movement, Macron’s poll ratings have been falling steadily, down to barely 40 percent. Despite overseeing a raft of economic and social reforms, the 40-year-old former investment banker has been labeled “president of the rich” by many left-wing critics. The prosecutor’s office said on Sunday evening Benalla would be investigated over group violence, interference in public service and illegal wearing of a police badge along with two other felonies. Being the target of an investigation in France does not necessarily lead to a trial. French media reported that Benalla, 26, had been granted perks by the presidency such as an apartment in a high-class Paris area and a chauffeur-driven car. He had also been given the highest level of security clearance to the lower house of parliament.
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