François Bayrou Under Fire Over School Abuse Scandal
Dozens of statements to a French court tell of decades of sexual abuse at a Catholic school. The case has also created a political crisis, with media allegations that today’s prime minister François Bayrou knew what was going on but failed to act.

France’s prime minister François Bayrou looks on during a session of questions to the government at the French National Assembly, French Parliament lower house, in Paris on March 4, 2025. (Ludovic Marin / AFP via Getty Images)
Since early February, France’s prime minister François Bayrou has been the subject of a damning series of articles by the investigative outlet Mediapart detailing allegations that he turned a blind eye to decades of allegations of physical violence, sexual abuse, and rape at Notre-Dame de Bétharram, a private Catholic school. It is located just outside of Pau, where Bayrou is mayor, and where he’s built his political career for the past forty-five years.
The Mediapart revelations come less than a year after a parliamentary report revealed just how little control the state is exercising over the thousands of private Catholic schools it funds. According to the parliamentary report, most schools have their contracts tacitly renewed each year without any real confirmation that they’re fulfilling the conditions required to receive state financing. The report found that the government inspects the 7,500 private schools it funds at a rate of five per year — the equivalent of just once every 1,500 years.
The thousands of Catholic schools who get their funding from the state ostensibly commit to following a curriculum that meets public-education standards, guaranteeing equal access to education for all students irrespective of background, and ensuring freedom of conscience for students and staff. In return, they get about half of their funding from the central government but no funding from local municipalities.