Morning coverage focused on fallout from May Day violence, with socialist deputy Jérôme Guedj condemning his expulsion from demonstrations as antisemitic harassment. The incident prompted apologies from ecological leader Marine Tondelier while revealing deeper fractures on the left.
By midday, authorities confirmed 54 people remained in custody after the protests. The military coordination of prison attacks was clarified with 21 suspects identified, including "Monsieur Propre" of the DZ Mafia criminal organization who operated through a Telegram channel.
International coverage highlighted Israel bombing near Syria's presidential palace following sectarian violence against the Druze minority, and European allies' frustration with Trump's first 100 days in office.
Late afternoon saw President Macron announcing a citizens' convention on school schedules and vacation times, while evening news focused on the Gard mosque murder case, with prosecutors revealing the killer's "obsessive desire to kill someone."