Political views During the
2007 French presidential election, Bruni stated that she would have voted for
Ségolène Royal, who was running against her future husband, Nicolas Sarkozy. Bruni said her lack of French citizenship disallowed her from voting, but she would have voted left-wing due to it being a family tradition. In an October 2011 interview with the Scottish newspaper
The Sunday Herald, Bruni said, "My family have always voted to the left. It's tradition. I'll never vote right wing." In an interview with
Le Point, Bruni said, when asked about her political leanings, "I am left wing, but I'm not against my husband or his party. I am not an activist." In a May 2011 interview with
Le Parisien, Bruni said she no longer felt left-wing and identified as an ultra-Sarkozyist. In a 2012
Vogue magazine interview, Bruni stated, "My generation doesn't need feminism ... I'm not at all an active feminist. On the contrary, I'm
bourgeois." However, on 16 November 2020, she told
BBC Radio 5 Live: "Of course I'm a feminist, like every woman is" and "My husband is very much a feminist man." She also said that she was "not at all a political person." In 2012, she stated that she supports same-sex marriage and same-sex adoption.
Relationship with the Enthovens In 2001, Bruni had her first child, son Aurélien, with philosophy professor
Raphaël Enthoven. Bruni has been described as having been the
mistress of Enthoven's father, journalist
Jean-Paul Enthoven, when she began her relationship with the younger Enthoven, who was at the time married to novelist
Justine Lévy; Bruni claims that she only went out with Jean-Paul Enthoven a few times and was never his lover, and that Raphaël Enthoven was already divorcing his wife when she encountered him months after last seeing Jean-Paul. Bruni told
Vanity Fair that Raphaël Enthoven ended their relationship in May 2007 because he felt they had become "like friends", and that they remained on good terms. After a brief romance, they married on 2 February 2008 at the
Élysée Palace in Paris. The marriage is Bruni's first and Sarkozy's third. Bruni acquired
French nationality by
naturalization on 10 December 2008. She has since made contradictory statements as to whether she still holds
Italian nationality, as well. On 28 April 2014 episode of the
Ellen DeGeneres Show, she confirmed that she still holds Italian citizenship. Following her marriage to Sarkozy, in February 2008, Bruni continued accompanying him on state visits, including to the United Kingdom in March 2008, which created a sensation in the international press and among the public in both Britain and France. As First Lady, she had an office and staff at her disposal in the East wing of the Élysée Palace. Controversy arose on the eve of the state visit to the UK, with the publication by Christie's auction house of a nude photograph of Bruni taken during her career as a model. The photograph sold for $91,000. At the same time there was great interest in Bruni's wardrobe, which was by
Christian Dior; this was seen as a diplomatic choice, since Dior is a French design house, but the wardrobe was designed by
John Galliano, a British designer working for Dior. Another controversy was the use of a popular photo of the French President and Bruni in the print advertising of
Ryanair. The couple was awarded damages of one Euro to Sarkozy and 60,000 Euros to Bruni by a French court due to the mocking nature of the advertisement which ran the tagline "With Ryanair, my whole family can come to my wedding." above Bruni's head. In December 2008, Bruni sued the makers of a bag featuring a nude shot taken during her youth. Clothes designer Pardon produced 10,000 of the shopping bags emblazoned with the nude photo taken in 1993, showing Bruni staring at the camera with her crossed hands covering her crotch. On 19 October 2011, Bruni gave birth to a daughter, Giulia, in the
Clinique de la Muette, in Paris.
Witness tampering On 9 July 2024, Bruni-Sarkozy was put on bail after being charged with having put pressure on a witness who accused ex-president Nicolas Sarkozy of having received illegal campaign financing from Libyan dictator, Colonel Muammar Gaddafi. In connection with the ongoing investigation into witness tampering, authorities have highlighted Carla Bruni-Sarkozy’s alleged role in facilitating communications aimed at persuading Ziad Takieddine to withdraw his statements regarding illegal campaign financing. Investigators reported that Bruni-Sarkozy was involved in discussions about coordinating these efforts and that her communications were scrutinized for evidence of coercion or undue influence. As a result, she is now under judicial supervision, which includes restrictions on contacting certain individuals involved in the case. She was suspected of being involved in bribing Lebanese judicial personnel. ==Discography==