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February 2026 editorial profile for Le Figaro. Below: how this outlet framed the actors and regions it covered most in February 2026. Tap any tile to jump to the detailed card.
One tile per entity (country or public figure) covered enough times this month to draw a confident editorial-stance read. Colour from red (hostile) to green (supportive); intensity scales with headline volume. Tap to jump to the detailed card.
The entity 'FR' (France) is not the subject of any headline; it appears only as a geographical or contextual reference (e.g., 'à Marseille', 'en France'). No editorial stance toward the country can be inferred from these headlines.
The outlet's stance is uniformly negative toward Epstein, treating him as a notorious criminal. No headlines present him neutrally or positively. The entity is deceased, so coverage focuses on his crimes and associations.
The bundle focuses heavily on US scandals (Epstein, Trump, tech lawsuits) and quotes French critics, but the outlet's own voice remains largely neutral; no consistent positive or negative framing of the US as a whole. Stance is 0 because coverage is mixed and factual, not systematically hostile or favourable toward the entity.
Headline 17 is a satirical/opposition quote mocking Macron, but it is attributed to a critic, not the outlet's own voice. Overall, Le Figaro treats Macron as a legitimate president whose words and decisions are newsworthy and often framed as authoritative, though not celebratory.
Coverage is largely factual but includes some critical framing (e.g., 'au rabais' in headline 4, 'abroger un texte fondateur' in headline 8) and distancing language ('assure' in headline 6). However, many headlines are neutral event reports, and the outlet does not consistently adopt a hostile or celebratory tone toward Trump. The presence of opposition quotes (headlines 10, 12) is balanced by straightforward summaries of his actions (headline 13).
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