Piers Morgan to donate $100,000 if Brigitte Macron is a man

Published June 13th, 2024 - 05:30 GMT
France's first lady Brigitte Macron
France's President Emmanuel Macron (L) and France's first lady Brigitte Macron wait upon the arrival of US President and US first lady ahead of a bilateral meeting as part of the US President's state visit to France, at the Presidential Elysee Palace in Paris on June 8, 2024.

ALBAWABA - In an interview with American commentator and author Candace Owens, British TV presenter Piers Morgan debated the claim whether France's First Lady Brigitte Macron is a man or a woman.

The new theory which was launched years ago is still under debate despite Emmanuel Macron and his wife's denial of the claim that Brigitte Macron was born a man and underwent a transgender operation.

In a new interview with Candace Owens, Piers Morgan has bet the US commentator $100,000 to a charity of her choice if she can prove that Brigitte Macron was born as a man.

Piers Morgan said: "We will get to the bottom of this, I'll bet you and what if we have a 100,000 pounds bet that to a charity of your choice and mine of a $100,000 (let's make it in dollars) right now that it is established beyond any doubt that she was born a woman."

In March, President Macron responded for the first time since the spread of the allegations questioning the birth gender of his wife, 70. He denied conspiracy theories regarding Brigitte Macron saying they are "false and fabricated."

Nonetheless, Brigitte’s daughter, attorney Tiphaine Auzaine, also commented on the rumors about her mother allegedly a transgender, she said: "I have concerns about the level of society when I hear what is circulating on social networks about my mother being a man."

When did the rumor about Brigitte Macron begin?

According to French media, last summer, a defamation lawsuit was made against two French women, who appeared in a YouTube video claiming that Brigitte was born in 1953 as a boy under the name "Jean-Michel Trogneux," which is in fact Brigitte's brother's name.

In 2021, Amandine Roy and Natacha Rey shared the four-hour video on YouTube, and years later, they were persecuted by a court in Normandy city for sharing the allegation against Brigitte Macron.

Subscribe

Sign up to our newsletter for exclusive updates and enhanced content