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US ambassador to France banned from meeting French government

By Thomson Reuters Feb 23, 2026 | 1:54 PM

PARIS, Feb 23 (Reuters) – The U.S. ambassador to France, Charles Kushner, has been banned from meeting members of the French government after not showing up at ​the Foreign Affairs ministry earlier in the day, ‌where he had been summoned over comments on the killing of a French far-right activist last week, diplomatic sources said on Monday.

“Following the publication by the U.S. Embassy of comments on a tragedy that ‌occurred ​in France and concerns only our ⁠national public debate – which ⁠we refuse to allow to be exploited – ambassador Charles Kushner was summoned today to the ministry. He did not show up,” the source added.

French far-right activist Quentin Deranque ​was beaten to death in a fight with alleged hard-left activists, in an incident that shocked the nation ⁠and has been called “France’s Charlie Kirk ⁠moment”, referring to last year’s shooting of ​the U.S. conservative activist.

The U.S. Embassy in France and the ​U.S. State Department’s Bureau of Counterterrorism said they were ‌monitoring the case, warning on X that “violent radical leftism was on the rise” and should be treated as a public safety threat.

“Faced with this apparent misunderstanding of the basic ⁠expectations of an ambassador who has the honour of representing his country, the minister requested that he no longer be allowed ⁠direct access to ‌members of the French government,” the source ⁠added.

This was the second time Kushner did not ​show ‌after being summoned. In August 2025, he ​had been ⁠asked to explain himself at the French Foreign Affairs ministry after having publicly raised his concern about the rise in anti-Semitic acts in France and criticising the French authorities for not doing enough against it.

(Reporting by Michel Rose; Editing by ​Benoit Van Overstraeten)