As heads of state go, this one appears to be quite expensive.
The investigative and satirical newspaper Le Canard Enchaîne reported on Wednesday that President François Hollande's personal hairdresser has been paid euro 9,895 - over $10,000 - per month since Hollande was elected in 2012, about the same amount as a government minister's salary.
The report is especially jarring for Hollande, 61, a Socialist who campaigned on the promise that he would be a "normal" and exemplary president but who has seen his private life spill into the open on several occasions.
It would be hard for Hollande to be less popular. His approval ratings, while receiving a bump from the Euro 2016 soccer tournament, have been persistently low. He has been forced to agree to a primary among left-leaning parties, including his own Socialists, to settle on a candidate for president next year - a first for a sitting president.
Hollande has not managed to deliver on his promise to significantly lower unemployment, especially among young people. His government has faced months of street protests over an unpopular bill to loosen France's rigid labour laws. And he faces a potential challenge from his economy minister, Emmanuel Macron, who has hinted that he may run for president next year. The new controversy - the hashtag #CoiffeurGate, "coiffeur" being French for hairdresser, was a trending topic on Twitter on Wednesday - could contribute to the image as a president who is out of touch.
Hollande is certainly not the first politician to encounter problems with hairdressing.
In 1993, two of Los Angeles International Airport's runways were shut for nearly an hour so that President Bill Clinton's Beverly Hills hairstylist could come aboard Air Force One to give him a haircut. In 2007, John Edwards, a former senator, had to reimburse his presidential campaign $800 to cover the cost of two haircuts. The Republican vice-presidential nominee Sarah Palin spent tens of thousands of dollars on hair and makeup in the homestretch of her 2008 campaign.
In France, opposition centre-right and far-right parties were, unsurprisingly, critical of Hollande, and while reactions in his own party were more muted, some struck a harsher tone.
"That's a lot of money for a hairdresser, and for the French in general," Thierry Mandon, the junior minister for higher education and research, told the LCP news channel. "For many people in France that really, really, really is a lot of money."
Still, the revelations have yet to morph into a full-blown political scandal in France, where the financial excesses or abuses of politicians are sometimes met with a shrug. On Twitter, French observers expressed a mixture of amusement and outrage.
"When my euro 2,600 of income tax represent one week of the hairdresser's salary #CoiffeurGate #shameful," one user wrote. "#CoiffeurGate - ah, now I finally understand the expression 'budgetary cuts,'" mused another. Some photoshopped royal wigs, mullets or toupees onto the French president's sparsely adorned head.
The hairdresser, identified by Le Canard Enchaîne only as Olivier B, was first mentioned in a book by two French journalists published in April that aimed to give a behind-the-scenes look at the Élysee Palace, the presidential residence.
The book identified the hairdresser as Olivier Benhamou, and said that his monthly salary was 8,000 euros. When the tabloid magazine Closer wrote an article using that information, Benhamou sued them; that case is pending.
The work contract Benhamou signed with the Élysee Palace was recently introduced as evidence in a French court as part of that case, and was obtained by Le Canard Enchaîne, which used it as the basis of its report.
The contract was signed by Hollande's former chief of staff. It is unclear whether Hollande knew how much the hairdresser is paid. On Wednesday evening, Valerie Trierweiler, Hollande's former companion, wrote on Twitter: "Let's be fair: F Hollande was not aware of the hairdresser's salary. I can attest to his anger when he learned about it later."
The Élysee Palace confirmed the report, telling Le Canard Enchaîne that Benhamou started his days very early and that "he redoes the president's hair every morning and as much as needed, for each public statement."
A 2015 report by the Cour des Comptes, the French organisation that conducts financial audits of the state and other public institutions, found that personnel spending at the Élysee Palace in 2014 - 68.2 million euros, out of the palace's overall budget of 100 million euros - had fallen by 1.6 per cent from the previous year and that staff numbers had been cut.
The investigative and satirical newspaper Le Canard Enchaîne reported on Wednesday that President François Hollande's personal hairdresser has been paid euro 9,895 - over $10,000 - per month since Hollande was elected in 2012, about the same amount as a government minister's salary.
The report is especially jarring for Hollande, 61, a Socialist who campaigned on the promise that he would be a "normal" and exemplary president but who has seen his private life spill into the open on several occasions.
It would be hard for Hollande to be less popular. His approval ratings, while receiving a bump from the Euro 2016 soccer tournament, have been persistently low. He has been forced to agree to a primary among left-leaning parties, including his own Socialists, to settle on a candidate for president next year - a first for a sitting president.
Hollande has not managed to deliver on his promise to significantly lower unemployment, especially among young people. His government has faced months of street protests over an unpopular bill to loosen France's rigid labour laws. And he faces a potential challenge from his economy minister, Emmanuel Macron, who has hinted that he may run for president next year. The new controversy - the hashtag #CoiffeurGate, "coiffeur" being French for hairdresser, was a trending topic on Twitter on Wednesday - could contribute to the image as a president who is out of touch.
Hollande is certainly not the first politician to encounter problems with hairdressing.
In 1993, two of Los Angeles International Airport's runways were shut for nearly an hour so that President Bill Clinton's Beverly Hills hairstylist could come aboard Air Force One to give him a haircut. In 2007, John Edwards, a former senator, had to reimburse his presidential campaign $800 to cover the cost of two haircuts. The Republican vice-presidential nominee Sarah Palin spent tens of thousands of dollars on hair and makeup in the homestretch of her 2008 campaign.
In France, opposition centre-right and far-right parties were, unsurprisingly, critical of Hollande, and while reactions in his own party were more muted, some struck a harsher tone.
"That's a lot of money for a hairdresser, and for the French in general," Thierry Mandon, the junior minister for higher education and research, told the LCP news channel. "For many people in France that really, really, really is a lot of money."
Still, the revelations have yet to morph into a full-blown political scandal in France, where the financial excesses or abuses of politicians are sometimes met with a shrug. On Twitter, French observers expressed a mixture of amusement and outrage.
"When my euro 2,600 of income tax represent one week of the hairdresser's salary #CoiffeurGate #shameful," one user wrote. "#CoiffeurGate - ah, now I finally understand the expression 'budgetary cuts,'" mused another. Some photoshopped royal wigs, mullets or toupees onto the French president's sparsely adorned head.
The hairdresser, identified by Le Canard Enchaîne only as Olivier B, was first mentioned in a book by two French journalists published in April that aimed to give a behind-the-scenes look at the Élysee Palace, the presidential residence.
The book identified the hairdresser as Olivier Benhamou, and said that his monthly salary was 8,000 euros. When the tabloid magazine Closer wrote an article using that information, Benhamou sued them; that case is pending.
The work contract Benhamou signed with the Élysee Palace was recently introduced as evidence in a French court as part of that case, and was obtained by Le Canard Enchaîne, which used it as the basis of its report.
The contract was signed by Hollande's former chief of staff. It is unclear whether Hollande knew how much the hairdresser is paid. On Wednesday evening, Valerie Trierweiler, Hollande's former companion, wrote on Twitter: "Let's be fair: F Hollande was not aware of the hairdresser's salary. I can attest to his anger when he learned about it later."
The Élysee Palace confirmed the report, telling Le Canard Enchaîne that Benhamou started his days very early and that "he redoes the president's hair every morning and as much as needed, for each public statement."
A 2015 report by the Cour des Comptes, the French organisation that conducts financial audits of the state and other public institutions, found that personnel spending at the Élysee Palace in 2014 - 68.2 million euros, out of the palace's overall budget of 100 million euros - had fallen by 1.6 per cent from the previous year and that staff numbers had been cut.
©2016 The New York Times News Service