This union, created in 2018 to defend the reforms of former minister Jean-Michel Blanquer, received a grant of 65,000 euros.
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Two officials from the Avenir lycéen union, created to support the reforms of the former Minister of National Education, Jean-Michel Blanquer, were sentenced on Friday December 22 in Paris to eight months in prison. This high school union, created in 2018 to support the ex-minister’s baccalaureate reform, was accused of having squandered public subsidies. He had received a grant of 65,000 euros from the ministry, including 43,000 euros to organize a founding congress.
But a Mediapart investigation revealed in November 2020 that union officials had spent in a few months 80% of the subsidy on expense reports in gourmet restaurants, five-star hotels or on the purchase of connected watches. As for the founding congress, it never took place. The State, which has become a civil party, is requesting the reimbursement of 65,000 euros in subsidies, a request which will be examined separately in September 2024.
The two officials, the co-founder and the treasurer of the union, were also sentenced to a suspended fine of 5,000 euros and an eligibility sentence of three years. The judges did not uphold the ban on entry into the public service that the prosecution had requested.