Brigitte Macron
Brigitte Macron (née Trogneux; born 13 April 1953) is a French former teacher of French literature and drama and the wife of Emmanuel Macron since 2007, who became President of France in 2017. Although commonly referred to as the First Lady of France, this title has no official or legal status in France and is an informal designation without constitutional basis or formal state recognition.[1] Born in Amiens to a family of chocolatiers as the youngest of six children, she earned a master's degree in arts and a qualification to teach French language and literature, beginning her career in Paris before moving to teaching positions in Strasbourg and Amiens.[2][3]
In Amiens at the Lycée la Providence Jesuit school, she met Emmanuel Macron, then a 15-year-old student in her drama class; their romantic relationship developed despite her being a married 39-year-old mother of three and his teacher, prompting his parents to send him to Paris to finish school, though they maintained contact and married on 20 October 2007 after her 2006 divorce from banker André-Louis Auzière.[4][5][6] The 24-year age gap and teacher-student dynamic have drawn ongoing scrutiny.[7][8] As the president's spouse, she holds an informal role with a dedicated budget, emphasizing initiatives in education, disability support, children's issues, health, and equality, including chairing efforts for Paris hospitals and founding organizations for vocational training.[9][10] Her tenure has also involved legal actions against claims, such as those alleging she was born male, which the couple has countered with planned scientific evidence in defamation suits.[11][12]
Early Life and Family Background
Birth and Upbringing
Brigitte Marie-Claude Trogneux was born on April 13, 1953, in Amiens, Somme department, northern France.[13][14][15] She was the youngest of six children in a family of chocolatiers.[13][14][16] Her parents were Jean Trogneux (1909–1994) and Simone Pujol (1910–1998), who represented the third generation to own and operate Chocolaterie Trogneux, a confectionery business established in 1872 that supplied macarons and other chocolates to the region.[13][17][18] The family resided in Amiens, though specific details of her childhood remain limited due to the Trogneux family's emphasis on privacy.[10][19] Brigitte grew up immersed in the operations of the chocolate enterprise, reflecting the economic foundation provided by her upbringing in this provincial, family-oriented setting.[10][16] Details on her early schooling are sparse, but she attended local institutions in Amiens.[19] The Trogneux household's focus on the confectionery trade likely influenced her early exposure to business acumen and family collaboration, though no public records indicate direct involvement in operations during her youth.[14][18]Education and Early Influences
Brigitte Macron, born Brigitte Marie-Claude Trogneux on April 13, 1953, in Amiens, France, received her early education in local Catholic schools, reflecting the religious milieu of her family.[10] Her upbringing in a Catholic family background shaped her formative years alongside the family's longstanding involvement in the confectionery trade.[20] She demonstrated strong academic aptitude during secondary school, culminating in her baccalauréat examination, where she achieved a mention très bien, denoting exceptional performance.[21] This distinction facilitated her pursuit of higher education, leading to a Master's degree in arts and a certificat d'aptitude au professorat de l'enseignement du second degré (CAPES) qualification in French language and literature, enabling secondary-level teaching.[2] [22]Professional Career
Teaching Positions
Brigitte Macron, then known as Brigitte Auzière, began her teaching career approximately in the early 1980s in Paris. She subsequently taught at Collège Lucie-Berger in Strasbourg, instructing students in French literature and Latin.[2][23] In 1991, she returned to her hometown of Amiens and joined Lycée la Providence, a Jesuit institution, as a teacher of French and Latin. At this school, she also led extracurricular theatre workshops, during which she first encountered Emmanuel Macron, a student at the time. Her tenure there lasted until approximately 2007, focusing on literature, classical languages, and dramatic arts.[2][23] Following her marriage to Emmanuel Macron in October 2007, she relocated to Paris and took up a position at Lycée Saint-Louis-de-Gonzague, another Jesuit secondary school. There, she continued teaching French and Latin while directing the school's drama club, roles she held until resigning in June 2015 to fully support her husband's emerging political career.[2][10][22]Key Professional Experiences
Brigitte Macron's early professional role involved serving as a press officer for the Nord-Pas-de-Calais Chamber of Commerce in 1982, marking her initial entry into the workforce following her education. She subsequently pursued a career in education, beginning with teaching positions in Paris before relocating to Strasbourg in the 1980s to instruct at Collège Lucie Berger. In 1991, she returned to her hometown of Amiens, where she took up roles teaching French literature and Latin at the Jesuit Lycée la Providence, a private Catholic secondary school.[2][16] Throughout her tenure as an educator, from approximately the early 1980s to 2015, Macron specialized in French literature, Latin, and drama, often incorporating theatrical elements into her curriculum. A notable aspect of her teaching involved directing school plays; in the mid-1990s at Lycée la Providence, she coached a production of The Art of Comedy by Eduardo De Filippo, during which she mentored her future husband, Emmanuel Macron, then a student. This experience highlighted her emphasis on performance and expression in education, though it later drew public scrutiny due to the significant age difference between teacher and pupil.[10][16][24] By the mid-2010s, as Emmanuel Macron advanced in politics—serving as Minister of the Economy from August 2014 to 2016—Brigitte Macron resigned from her teaching post to provide direct support. She began attending policy meetings, organizing private dinners for networking with influential figures, and acting as an informal adviser, roles that bridged her educational background with political facilitation. This shift culminated in her full-time focus on his 2017 presidential campaign, effectively ending her formal professional engagements outside the public sphere.[25][20]Personal Relationships
First Marriage and Children
Brigitte Trogneux married banker André-Louis Auzière on June 22, 1974, at the age of 21.[26] The couple resided in Amiens, France, where Auzière worked in finance and Trogneux pursued her career as a literature and drama teacher.[27] Their marriage produced three children: son Sébastien, born in 1975; daughter Laurence, born in 1977; and daughter Tiphaine, born in 1984.[2] [28] Sébastien Auzière trained as an engineer and has maintained a low public profile, focusing on professional endeavors outside the political spotlight.[29] Laurence Auzière became a cardiologist, practicing medicine in France.[29] Tiphaine Auzière pursued a career in law, later entering public discourse to defend her mother's personal choices amid media scrutiny.[30] The children were raised in a conventional family setting in Amiens until the mid-1990s, when reports indicate the parents separated following Brigitte's developing relationship with a former student.[31] The marriage formally ended in divorce in 2006, after which Auzière, who died in 2019, largely withdrew from public view.[5] [32]Relationship with Emmanuel Macron
Brigitte Macron first encountered Emmanuel Macron in 1993 at Lycée La Providence, a Jesuit secondary school in Amiens, France, where she served as a teacher of French literature and drama. Macron, then 15 years old, was one of her students; she was 40, married to banker André-Louis Auzière, and mother to three children.[33][34] The 24-year age gap between them—Brigitte born April 13, 1953, and Emmanuel December 21, 1977—drew immediate family opposition, prompting Macron's parents to relocate him to Paris in 1994 to attend Lycée Henri-IV and distance the pair.[35][36] Despite the intervention, Macron openly expressed his intention to marry her, reportedly telling Brigitte during their school collaboration on a theater production, "Whatever you do, I will marry you." The two maintained contact through correspondence and occasional meetings while Macron pursued his studies, including admission to Sciences Po and the École nationale d'administration (ENA). Their romantic involvement deepened over the ensuing decade, though Brigitte remained married until finalizing her divorce from Auzière in 2006 after 30 years of marriage and three children together.[36][5][37] Emmanuel Macron and Brigitte Auzière wed on October 20, 2007, in a civil ceremony at Le Touquet town hall, her family's coastal vacation spot in northern France; he was 29, she 54. The marriage produced no children, though Brigitte's adult offspring from her prior union—two sons and a daughter—have integrated into the couple's life, with her daughter Tiphaine Auzière notably younger than Macron by seven years. Throughout Macron's ascent in finance at Rothschild & Cie (2008–2012), his political roles under François Hollande, and his 2017 presidential victory, Brigitte provided personal support, relocating to Paris and resigning from teaching in 2015 to focus on their partnership.[6][5][38] The couple has described their bond as resilient against public scrutiny, with Macron crediting Brigitte's influence on his emotional and intellectual development from their early encounters.[36][33]Later Family Dynamics
Brigitte Macron's marriage to Emmanuel Macron in 2007 integrated her three adult children from her previous marriage—Sébastien Auzière (born 1975), Laurence Auzière-Jourdan (born 1977), and Tiphaine Auzière (born 1984)—into a blended family structure, with Macron assuming a stepfather role despite being only seven years older than Sébastien.[2] [39] The children, who initially viewed Macron as the "crazy boy" from their mother's drama class, gradually accepted the relationship, with Tiphaine later describing Macron as an "extraordinary stepfather" alongside her biological father.[40] [41] Laurence pursued a career as a cardiologist, Sébastien in engineering and statistics, and Tiphaine as a lawyer who contributed to Macron's 2017 presidential campaign, reflecting familial support amid public scrutiny.[39] [42] Brigitte Macron and Emmanuel Macron have no biological children together. Brigitte has seven grandchildren, who reportedly refer to Macron as "daddy" rather than grandfather.[43] [44] Public statements from family members, such as Tiphaine's defense of her mother's choices against rumors, have addressed the relationship, with the step-siblings maintaining low public profiles while participating in occasional family events at the Élysée Palace.[41] [45] Brigitte has credited the decade-long delay in formalizing her relationship with Macron to prioritizing her children's stability during their formative years, following her divorce from André-Louis Auzière in 2006.[44] No major estrangements have been reported.[2]Role as First Lady
Official Initiatives and Activities
As Première dame, Brigitte Macron has engaged in informal official activities centered on charity, education, and health, without a formal title or constitutional role. In August 2017, the Élysée Palace delineated her scope to include representation of France abroad, advocacy in disability, education, health, culture, child protection, and gender equality, supported by two advisors and a cabinet funded from the presidential budget. The initial annual cost was approximately €440,000, primarily covering salaries for staff and collaborators, as announced by the government spokesperson in November 2017 based on Bercy figures.[46] Subsequent audits by the Cour des comptes report varying annual costs around €300,000 in recent years for similar expenses.[47][48][49] A key initiative is her presidency of the Fondation Hôpitaux de Paris-Hôpitaux de France, assumed on June 12, 2019, succeeding Bernadette Chirac after 25 years. The foundation, established in 1989, funds projects to humanize hospital stays for children and elderly patients, such as equipping pediatric wards with recreational facilities and supporting end-of-life care improvements; under her leadership, it has renewed partnerships like with the Fédération Hospitalière de France in 2023 to enhance hospital living conditions.[50][51][52] In education and employment, Macron launched the LIVE (L'Institut des Vocations pour l'Insertion et l'Emploi) association in September 2018, focusing on vocational training for individuals with employment barriers, including those with disabilities or low qualifications. She chairs its pedagogical committee; the inaugural institute in Clichy-sous-Bois opened to 60 participants ("Livers"), emphasizing practical skills for job market integration.[2][10] Her activities extend to child protection and disability advocacy, including hospital visits like to Hôpital Saint-Louis in January 2024 for adolescent hematology units and the Institut de Génétique Médicale d'Alsace in December 2021, where she promoted specialized care enhancements. On gender equality, she has participated in international dialogues, such as with UN Women in April 2019, but these align more with broader French diplomatic efforts than standalone programs.[53][54][55]Influence on Policy and Presidency
Brigitte Macron has provided informal advice to her husband during his presidency through personal discussions, operating from the "Madame Wing" at the Élysée Palace with dedicated staff. While lacking a formal policy-making role, media reports have described her entourage's involvement in discussions ahead of personnel appointments and her input on staffing matters due to her proximity to the president. For instance, discussions involving her entourage were reported ahead of Rachida Dati's nomination as culture minister in January 2024, and she praised Gabriel Attal's courage following his appointment as prime minister in January 2024 in a TF1 interview.[56][56] On policy matters, Macron has shared observations drawn from her background in education and public consultations. In January 2024, President Macron announced trials for school uniforms in public schools, an initiative that Brigitte Macron had publicly advocated for based on her teaching experience and views on classroom social dynamics. She has also relayed hundreds of citizen letters addressing incest and sexual violence to policymakers, in connection with subsequent reforms strengthening protection measures and support services.[56][10] Her advisory input often focuses on areas like education and youth, serving as a sounding board by critiquing speeches and strategies based on direct engagement with affected groups. This extends to broader presidential operations, where she has been reported to filter requests from individuals seeking access and relay concerns on social issues. Such reported involvement has been noted in accounts of internal dynamics among aides.[57][56]Public Perception and Media
Fashion and Styling Choices
![Brigitte Macron in 2024](./assets/Brigitte_Macron_2024_$1Brigitte Macron has worn tailored silhouettes as First Lady, often from high-end French labels. She has shown a preference for Louis Vuitton since Emmanuel Macron's 2017 presidential campaign. This includes coordinated ensembles like coatdresses and midi skirts, as seen in her cornflower blue coatdress paired with matching heels during public appearances in early 2025. Other designers she has worn include Christian Dior for structured suiting, Balmain for dresses, Alexandre Vauthier, and Alaïa.[58][59][60] Her attire post-2017 has included formal garments incorporating elements like raised collars and chain prints during state visits. For instance, during a May 2025 reception in Indonesia with President Prabowo Subianto, she wore a long-sleeve chain-print midi dress by Louis Vuitton. Macron's choices, including mini skirts and fitted clothing at age 71, have generated media coverage.[61][10][62] Public discourse on her styling includes scrutiny over the appropriateness of revealing cuts for her role. Fashion commentators have described her outfits as blending elegance.[63] She maintains a blonde bob hairstyle just above the shoulders, with styling varying for events.
General Public Image
Brigitte Macron has maintained a predominantly positive public image in France based primarily on early-term data, often characterized by polls as more favorable than that of her husband, President Emmanuel Macron. A June 2018 Ifop poll for Paris Match revealed that 67% of French respondents expressed a very good opinion of her, positioning her as one of the most popular first ladies in recent decades.[64] This approval stemmed from perceptions of her as supportive, discreet, and embodying French cultural reverence for elegant, mature women without overt political ambition.[65] [66] Her public persona emphasizes poise and accessibility, drawing from her background as a teacher and mother, which resonates with audiences seeking a relatable figure amid the presidency's formalities.[67] Early in the Macron administration, proposals to formalize her role as first lady sparked debate and petitions against perceived extravagance, prompting adjustments that preserved her image by clarifying her unofficial status and avoiding taxpayer-funded expansions.[68] [69] While specific recent polls on her personal approval are scarce, her visibility remains tied to the presidency's challenges, yet she continues to be viewed as a stabilizing, glamorous presence in official events and initiatives. Mainstream media portrayals highlight her stylistic influence and charitable engagements, though public sentiment reflects broader fluctuations in support for the Macron era.[65]Controversies and Criticisms
Ethical Concerns Over Teacher-Student Relationship
Brigitte Macron met Emmanuel Macron in 1993 at Lycée La Providence, a Jesuit high school in Amiens, France, where she served as his drama teacher.[13] At the time, Macron was 15 years old and enrolled in the same class as Macron's daughter, Laurence, while Brigitte was 40, married to banker André-Louis Auzière, and mother of three children.[34] [5] The relationship began as an emotional attachment during theater workshops, with Macron later declaring his love to her, prompting her to advise him to wait until adulthood.[8] The teacher-student dynamic in their early interactions has raised concerns regarding power imbalances between educators and minors. Critics, including commentators in media outlets, argue that teachers hold positions of authority, and romantic pursuits involving students can breach professional boundaries, even if the student's age meets France's consent threshold of 15.[70] [71] Reports indicate that other students and school officials observed unusual closeness, prompting questions about influence in the academic setting.[72] Emmanuel Macron's parents, upon discovering the affair—initially mistaking it for a romance with Brigitte's daughter—opposed it vehemently, sending their son to Paris at age 16 to complete his studies and separate the pair, citing the inappropriateness of the age gap and her marital status.[73] [74] Some analyses, such as those in opinion pieces and professional ethics discussions, highlight the 24-year age difference and Brigitte's maternal role in the school context as factors that could raise risks of exploitation, paralleling wider conversations on educator responsibilities.[7] [75] [10] Public and media discourse has described the relationship in terms of professional conduct boundaries, with French and international observers questioning potential differences in scrutiny if the genders were reversed.[8] The couple maintained contact through letters during the separation, Brigitte divorced in 2006, and they married in 2007 when he was 29. Detractors maintain that the initial imbalance affected Macron's development. These discussions often reference guidelines on mentorship power asymmetries, noting that legal allowance does not imply ethical alignment in education.[33][76][70]Allegations of Unelected Influence and Nepotism
In 2017, shortly after Emmanuel Macron's election as president, proposals emerged to formalize Brigitte Macron's role through a "transparency charter" that would grant her a dedicated office, staff of up to six employees, and public funding for activities, prompting widespread allegations of nepotism.[77] Critics, including opposition figures and media outlets, argued this contradicted Macron's campaign commitments to eradicate nepotism in public office, such as banning parliamentarians from employing relatives, and effectively created an unelected position funded by taxpayers.[78] The Élysée Palace faced a petition with nearly 200,000 signatures protesting the arrangement as a form of familial favoritism.[79] Facing backlash, the government abandoned plans for any paid or budgeted role for Brigitte Macron by August 21, 2017, confirming she would operate informally without official resources or salary, though she retained visibility in public duties.[80][81] Macron defended the initial intent as transparency rather than privilege, but detractors maintained it exemplified undue elevation of a spouse lacking electoral mandate.[78] Allegations of unelected influence have persisted, with reports portraying Brigitte Macron as a key behind-the-scenes advisor shaping presidential strategy and personnel choices.[57] Observers have described her as the president's "confidante and coach," influencing his understanding of public opinion and intervening in matters like education policy, drawing from her background as a teacher.[57] In early 2023, her public endorsement of school uniforms and appeal to a "silent majority" on social issues ignited criticism for injecting personal views into partisan debates, exacerbating divisions within Macron's centrist alliance.[82] Further scrutiny arose in 2018 over protocol breaches, such as Brigitte Macron positioning herself beside rather than behind the president during state visits, which traditionalists condemned as presumptuous overreach akin to monarchical entitlement.[83] Such actions fueled perceptions of her wielding informal power disproportionate to her unelected status, though defenders attribute it to modernizing France's first lady role amid Macron's emphasis on partnership.[83] No verified instances of direct nepotistic appointments benefiting her immediate family—such as her three children from a prior marriage—have been substantiated in public records, but the optics of her proximity to executive decisions continue to invite skepticism from conservative and populist commentators.[77]Transgender Conspiracy Theories
Conspiracy theories alleging that Brigitte Macron is transgender emerged in late 2021, primarily in French far-right and anti-vaccine online circles amid heightened public distrust of institutions during the COVID-19 pandemic.[84] Proponents claim she was born male as Jean-Michel Trogneux—her actual older brother's name—and transitioned in the 1980s, assuming her sister's identity after the latter's supposed early death; they cite purported discrepancies in early photos, lack of public records from her youth, and her family's chocolate business history as "evidence."[85] [12] These assertions lack supporting documentation and contradict verifiable records, including Macron's birth certificate as Brigitte Marie-Claude Trogneux on April 13, 1953, in Amiens, France, as the youngest of six siblings, and her motherhood to three children from her first marriage to André-Louis Auzière between 1974 and 1984.[86] [87] The theory gained traction through a December 2021 YouTube video by self-described psychic Amandine Roy and journalist Natacha Rey, who alleged Macron's transgender status and ties to elite cover-ups, prompting Brigitte Macron to file a libel complaint in 2022.[88] A Paris court convicted Roy and Rey of defamation in September 2024, ordering them to pay €8,000 in damages to Macron and €5,000 to her brother Jean-Michel Trogneux.[88] The women appealed, and the appeals court acquitted them in July 2025, ruling that their statements did not meet the threshold for defamation; Macron appealed the acquittal to France's Court of Cassation in July 2025.[89] [86] In 2025, the rumor spread internationally via American conservative commentator Candace Owens, who devoted a podcast series titled "Becoming Brigitte" to investigating alleged inconsistencies in Macron's biography, such as sparse pre-1980s imagery and family testimonies, drawing from French journalist Xavier Poussard's book 'Becoming Brigitte,' a self-published work that has appeared on Amazon bestseller lists and alleges biographical inconsistencies, framing it as a potential CIA-orchestrated deception.[90] [91] The Macrons responded by filing a defamation lawsuit against Owens in Delaware Superior Court in July 2025, alleging the claims were false.[92] [93] [11] The suit includes plans to submit medical and scientific evidence, including birth records and genetic documentation, to support the Macrons' assertion of Brigitte Macron's female identity from birth. Owens has defended her inquiries as journalistic scrutiny of public figures, denying malice.[94] Such narratives align with broader "transvestigation" patterns targeting prominent women, including Michelle Obama and Jacinda Ardern, often amplified on social media platforms resistant to moderation, where anecdotal photo analysis substitutes for empirical proof.[95] No peer-reviewed or official investigations have validated the claims, which persist despite ongoing legal proceedings, fueled by political opposition to Emmanuel Macron's presidency and skepticism toward elite authenticity.[96] [91]Recent Public Incidents and Scrutiny
In May 2025, during an official visit to Vietnam, a video captured Brigitte Macron placing both hands on President Emmanuel Macron's face as they prepared to descend from their presidential aircraft in Hanoi.[18] [97] The Élysée Palace dismissed the footage as a playful gesture amid tight quarters on the plane, with no official confirmation of discord.[98] [99] Some outlets described it as a "shove" or "slap," prompting widespread media speculation about tension in their marriage and drawing scrutiny from international commentators, who noted it as a distraction from Macron's diplomatic agenda, including discussions on Indo-Pacific security.[98] Less than two months later, on July 8, 2025, another awkward exchange occurred as the couple arrived in the United Kingdom for a state visit; video showed Brigitte Macron ignoring her husband's extended hand while deboarding the aircraft, opting instead to grasp the handrail and proceed ahead, leaving Macron to retract his arm visibly.[97] [99] Media reports highlighted the moment as a public snub, fueling online discussions and tabloid coverage about the couple's dynamic, with some attributing it to Brigitte's independent demeanor during high-profile travels.[100] The Élysée again downplayed the event, framing it as incidental rather than indicative of strife, amid broader scrutiny of the first lady's visible role in protocol-heavy engagements.[101] These episodes contributed to intensified media and public examination of Brigitte Macron's public comportment, particularly in light of her age difference with the president and her former teaching background, with conservative outlets questioning the optics of such interactions during a period of domestic political challenges for Macron's administration.[97] In October 2025, Macron addressed online amplification of such incidents and related rumors, issuing guidelines to her team for countering hate speech while emphasizing family protection, though critics argued this reflected an overreach in managing her image.[102] French media, often aligned with establishment views, minimized the incidents as trivial, while international coverage varied, with U.S.-based reports more inclined to portray them as symptomatic of elite disconnect.[103]Honors and Recognition
French Honors
Brigitte Macron has not received any official French state decorations, such as the Légion d'honneur or the Ordre national du Mérite, which are typically awarded for exceptional service to the nation.[104] Her prior career as a literature and drama teacher spanning nearly three decades did not result in academic distinctions like the Palmes académiques, despite her qualifications including a maîtrise in letters and a CAPES certification. As Première dame since May 2017, she has actively participated in award ceremonies, including presenting insignes of Chevalier in the Légion d'honneur and attending events tied to the order's institutions, such as visits to the Maison d'éducation de la Légion d'honneur in Saint-Denis in January 2018.[105] [51] In June 2019, Macron was elected president of the Fondation Hôpitaux de Paris-Hôpitaux de France, a role focused on improving hospital patient experiences through initiatives like the Pâques des Hôpitaux campaign, reflecting her commitment to charitable causes but not constituting a formal honor.[51] This position underscores her influence in French public life without the conferral of titular distinctions common to political or military figures.International Awards
Brigitte Macron has received several foreign honors from European monarchies and republics, typically awarded during state visits to recognize her contributions to education, cultural exchanges, and Franco-foreign relations.[10]| Country | Award | Date | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Denmark | Dame Grand Cross of the Order of the Dannebrog | 2018 | Recognized her work in educational cooperation; upgraded with a diamond breast star on March 31, 2025, during a Danish state visit to France.[10][106][107] |
| Italy | Grand Cross of the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic | 2021 | Awarded following successful cultural exchange programs between France and Italy.[10] |
| Sweden | Grand Cross of the Royal Order of the Polar Star | January 31, 2024 | Conferred during a French state visit to Sweden, in acknowledgment of bilateral ties.[108][109] |
| Norway | Grand Cross of the Royal Norwegian Order of Merit | 2025 | Presented during an official visit, highlighting diplomatic engagements.[110][111] |