Domestic and political reactions On the evening of Deranque's death, President
Emmanuel Macron denounced "an unprecedented outburst of violence" and called for calm. A memorial gathering was organized that same afternoon in
Angers. The entire political class joined the call for calm and condemned the brawl.
La France Insoumise (LFI) condemned the violence and asserted that its security service was not involved. LFI became the target of political attacks because its leader
Jean-Luc Mélenchon had fought against the government making the Jeune Garde an outlawed organisation, and one of its co-founders,
Raphaël Arnault, sits as a LFI
deputy in the National Assembly. In 2025, Mélenchon had called on LFI members to become involved with the Jeune Garde. After the Jeune Garde was outlawed by the government, LFI deputy
Thomas Portes stated the Jeune Garde "will live on", while the
European Parliament LFI leader
Manon Aubry said: "Glory to the Jeune Garde."In late February 2026, Mélenchon accused the far-right feminist collective Némésis of having deliberately organised a "trap" (
traquenard) by using its members as bait to provoke clashes with antifascist militants around Rima Hassan's conference in Lyon. He called for the dissolution of Némésis. On 18 February 2026, the government spokesperson
Maud Bregeon called on LFI to remove Arnault from its parliamentary group.
Socialist Party leader
Olivier Faure stated "La France Insoumise cannot avoid a self-examination", adding the party "constantly [resorts] to excesses and [seeks] to create conflict between everything and its opposite." Former president
François Hollande called on left-wing parties to no longer ally with LFI, stating that "they maintain a brutality in their expression, denunciation, accusations, excesses, and hurtful verbal formulas." Several figures and media outlets, ranging from president Macron, the government and the far-right, such as justice minister
Gérald Darmanin, interior minister
Laurent Nuñez, and
Le Figaro, claimed that the killers were far-left. Nuñez stated on 15 February 2026 the Jeune Garde collective appeared to be "clearly" involved in the death, based on testimonies. On the evening of 15 February, a banner in tribute to Deranque was held up by Lyon supporters, probably the , shortly before the start of the football match between
Olympique Lyonnais and
OGC Nice. Demonstrations in support of Deranque and demanding justice were organized in the following days in several French cities by royalist, nationalist, and identitarian groups. In Paris, a few hundred people gathered in front of the
Sorbonne, later joined by elected officials and leaders of the French far-right, such as
Éric Zemmour. The Rhône prefecture announced on Saturday that it intends to file a complaint with the courts regarding
Nazi salutes and racist and homophobic insults detected in Lyon during the memorial. In
Montpellier, about fifty demonstrators from the were disrupted by some twenty far-left activists, forcing the police to intervene. One person was arrested. During the night of 15–16 February, approximately ten LFI deputies' local offices were vandalized. On 1 April 2026, Raphaël Arnault, LFI deputy and co-founder of the dissolved Jeune Garde, returned to the National Assembly. National Assembly President
Yaël Braun-Pivet stated that, while legally permitted, "morally it is difficult for him to represent the Nation given this type of behaviour" and left the decision to Arnault’s conscience.
International reactions The Italian Prime Minister
Giorgia Meloni wrote on social media that the killing of Deranque was "a wound for all of Europe" and part of "a climate of ideological hatred sweeping several nations". Macron responded: "I'm always struck by how people who are nationalists, who don't want to be bothered in their own country, are always the first ones to comment on what's happening in other countries." The Italian Minister of Foreign Affairs
Antonio Tajani likened the killing to his country's
Years of Lead, adding: "Condemning acts like this serves to prevent Italy from falling back into such a dark past." Kushner did not appear to the summons, citing a prior engagement, and instead sent a deputy from the US embassy. This led to Barrot to moving to request that Kushner "no longer be allowed direct access" to government ministers. == See also ==