He’s only 39 and fresh-faced, but France’s President Emmanuel Macron has run up a make-up bill of 26,000 euros (P1,584,771) in his first 100 days in office, offering fresh ammunition to his critics.
The bill, revealed by Le Point magazine and confirmed by the presidency to AFP on Friday, was paid to a freelance make-up artist for work since the centrist took power in mid-May.
It recalled an embarrassing revelation about the balding former president Francois Hollande who was forced to admit to employing a private hairdresser on a pre-tax monthly salary of nearly 10,000 euros ($11,800).
Opponents seized on the total of the make-up bills – one for 10,000 euros and another for 16,000 euros – with most of the French media publishing stories about the issue.
“While France is slaving away, Macron is spreading (the equivalent of) 23 times the minimum wage on his face,” wrote far-right strategist Florian Philippot on Twitter.
A source in the presidency told BFM television that future costs would be “significantly reduced,” while claiming that that both Hollande and former right-wing president Nicolas Sarkozy spent more on make-up.
Many male politicians in the West wear foundation while making media appearances to counter the bleaching effect of studio lights or flash photography, as well as concealer to cover up signs of under-eye fatigue.
The leak to Le Point comes at a bad time for France’s youngest-ever president whose approval ratings have fallen sharply since his victory in May standing in his first ever election.