Brigitte and Emmanuel Macron launch defamation case against US podcaster Candace Owens over ludicrous claim French first lady was born a man

Brigitte Macron has launched a defamation case against Candace Owens over the US podcaster’s ludicrous claim that she was born a man.

The French first lady filed her 218-page lawsuit in Delaware on Wednesday, accusing Owens of publishing ‘outlandish, defamatory, and far-fetched fictions’.

Owens attacked Ms Macron, 72, in a now-deleted YouTube video posted in March last year, propagating the false claim that she was born a man.

The podcaster cited a ‘thorough investigation’ by blogger Natacha Rey, whom Macron is also suing for libel in a separate claim.

Brigitte and her husband, French President Emmanuel Macron, said in a statement: ‘Because Ms Owens systematically reaffirmed these falsehoods in response to each of our attorneys’ repeated requests for a retraction, we ultimately concluded that referring the matter to a court of law was the only remaining avenue for remedy.

‘Ms Owens’ campaign of defamation was plainly designed to harass and cause pain to us and our families and to garner attention and notoriety. We gave her every opportunity to back away from these claims, but she refused.

‘It is our earnest hope that this lawsuit will set the record straight and end this campaign of defamation once and for all.’

Last week, two women convicted of defaming French first lady Brigitte Macron by saying she was ‘born a man’ were sensationally cleared on appeal

Brigitte Macron stands at her husband’s side at the Place de la Concore in Paris, on July 14

Candance Owens aired a false theory claiming Ms Macron was born a man

Candance Owens aired a false theory claiming Ms Macron was born a man 

The claims were aired on social media before Ms Macron took legal action

The claims were aired on social media before Ms Macron took legal action 

Tom Clare of Clare Locke LLP, lead counsel for the Macrons, announced the filing of the 22-count defamation lawsuits against Owens, citing ‘a relentless year-long campaign of defamation’.

‘Ms Owens has promoted a preposterous narrative about the Macrons, including incendiary and verifiably false accusations of identity theft, incest, violent crimes, and mind control,’ a statement shared with MailOnline read.

It comes days after sources close to the Macrons revealed Brigitte has been driven to despair by online abuse stemming from claims she was born a man and had ‘sexually abused’ her future husband when he was a boy.

Owens took to social media in March 2024 to announce she was ‘waging her entire professional reputation’ on the theory that the French first lady was born Jean-Michel Trogneux before transitioning around the age of 30. 

The conspiracy theory alleges that Brigitte did not give birth to any of her three children, and that her first husband, a 69-year-old retired banker said to have died a recluse in 2020, never existed.

The wild claims stem from an article published in September 2021 by French far-right magazine Faits et Documents (Facts & Documents), which initially went unnoticed.

But the allegations were seized upon after far-right blogger and Faits et Documents contributor Natacha Rey, and clairvoyant Amandine Roy, covered them in a YouTube interview that went viral. 

The Macrons initiated legal proceedings against Rey, 49, and Roy, 53, and the pair were initially found guilty of libel and fined.

But the Paris Court of Appeal earlier this month overturned the convictions, finding that the claims made by Rey and Roy were ‘made in good faith’ and repeated information that was already in the public domain.

The shock ruling prompted a fresh wave of abuse directed at the French First Lady on social media, who was said to have been left ‘absolutely devastated’. 

The Macrons have taken that case to the Court of Cassation – the only legal forum that can overturn Appeal Court rulings – in addition to filing a lawsuit against Owens in the US.  

France's President Emmanuel Macron and his wife Brigitte Macron wave at the Presidential Palace in Hanoi on May 26, 2025

France’s President Emmanuel Macron and his wife Brigitte Macron wave at the Presidential Palace in Hanoi on May 26, 2025 

French President Emmanuel Macron and his wife Brigitte Macron arrive at Downing Street on July 9, 2025 in London, England

French President Emmanuel Macron and his wife Brigitte Macron arrive at Downing Street on July 9, 2025 in London, England

The girl with a pudding bowl haircut sitting on her mother’s knee is Brigitte Trogneux. Her family are renowned chocolatiers and confectioners in the Amiens region of northern France

The girl with a pudding bowl haircut sitting on her mother’s knee is Brigitte Trogneux. Her family are renowned chocolatiers and confectioners in the Amiens region of northern France

The relationship between French President Macron, 47, and his 72-year-old wife has long been a subject of fascination at home and abroad since they met in 1992.

She was 39, a married mother-of-three, and a teacher at the French Catholic school in Amiens. He was 14 and a pupil in the same class as one of her daughters when they first crossed paths. 

Brigitte later divorced her husband and began a relationship with Macron while he was in his late teens.

 

 

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