❓WHAT HAPPENED: Over two-thirds of the French population say “anti-white racism” has become a significant problem in their country.
👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: The CSA (Institut d’Études), the French people, and French political parties.
📍WHEN & WHERE: The polling was published on April 2, 2026.
🎯IMPACT: French views on anti-white racism are highly polarized based on political identification; with the far-left rejecting that it exists, while the center-left and political right both acknowledge that it is a problem in France.
Over two-thirds of the French population say “anti-white racism” has become a significant problem in their country. According to a new survey conducted by the CSA (Institut d’Études), a prominent French research institute, 67 percent of respondents see discrimination against white people as a reality in modern France.
Notably, French views on anti-white racism are highly polarized based on political identification. The CSA survey found that political leftists overwhelmingly reject the idea that the country has fostered a culture of anti-white discrimination, with 64 percent of voters who affiliate with far-left La France Insoumise (France Unbowed) saying it is not a problem, and 72 percent of Green Party voters denying that anti-white racism exists.
However, on France’s center-left, 52 percent of respondents affiliated with President Emmanuel Macron‘s Renaissance party say anti-white racism exists. Likewise, 51 percent of Socialist Party voters acknowledge that discrimination against whites in France does occur.
Respondents who identify with France’s political right overwhelmingly say they believe anti-white racism is a problem in the country. Eighty-one percent of those affiliated with Les Républicains, a center-right party, say discrimination against white people is a problem, while 91 percent of respondents who support Marine Le Pen’s National Rally party believe anti-white racism exists in France.
The National Pulse reported this past January that French authorities had barred ten members of the British anti-mass migration activist group Raise the Colours from entering or remaining in France, citing their involvement in actions protesting boats along France’s northern coastline carrying illegal immigrants to Britain. In a statement, the French Interior Ministry accused the activists of having carried out “propaganda activities” along the coast.
Join Pulse+ to comment below, and receive exclusive e-mail analyses.