One year after its adoption, the sports law put to the test by the governance crisis of the French sports movement

While French sport is going through a deep crisis of governance with the cases that taint the French Rugby Federation (FFR) or the French Football Federation (FFF), the law “to democratize sport” in France has never seemed to resonate so much. with the news. Promulgated on March 2, 2022, the law encourages, among other things, the development of sports practice (title I) and frames the economic model of professional sport (title III).

The text also attaches, while Noël Le Graët resigned, Tuesday, February 28, from his post of president of the FFF, to dust off in depth the governance of sports federations (title II).

Also read the story: Article reserved for our subscribers Noël Le Graët resigns from the presidency of the FFF after a chaotic end to his reign

The law, brought and originally defended by the former Minister of Sports Roxana Maracineanu, thus obliges the national federations from 1er January 2024 – and from 1er January 2028 for the regional bodies – respect for strict parity when renewing their governing bodies. Today, only three women chair one of the 36 Olympic federations in France. It also limits to three the number of mandates that a president of a federation or professional league can exercise. The text also ensures the financial transparency of leaders and strengthens the means to fight against all forms of discrimination and sexual and gender-based violence.

Céline Calvez (Renaissance) remembers heated discussions before the adoption of the text with the actors of the French sports landscape, mainly white and rather old men. “Why would that change? », “your law, we are going to rot it”, was often heard answering the deputy of Hauts-de-Seine, co-rapporteur of the sport law in the National Assembly. A year later, and even if “all the federations are not at the same point in the transcription of the law in their statutes” – judo or even handball are among the “good” students – efforts towards greater probity and more representativeness infuse the French sports movement.

Read also: Bill to ‘democratize sport’ causes frustration and regret

Strengthen ethics in sport

Among the other measures of the law, those aimed at promoting “the development of the practice for the greatest number” represent the first half of the text of the law. They are essentially based on the strengthening of healthy sport, now extended to people with chronic illnesses or with factors of hypertension, obesity, etc., and no longer just people with long-term illnesses. The law also establishes thirty minutes of daily sport in primary school, generalized somehow to schools in France since the start of the school year in September.

Also read the report: Article reserved for our subscribers Paris 2024: “After the effort, my students are finally more attentive”

Céline Calvez recognizes a certain delay in the application of Title I of the law. “These are measures that require a lot of interministerial dialogue (sport and health, sport and education, sport and territory, etc.). We need consultation”argues the parliamentarian who explains that she reviewed, Tuesday, February 28, the sixty articles of the law with the Minister of Sports and the Olympic and Paralympic Games, Amélie Oudéa-Castéra.

“We are more in the control of law enforcement [de nombreux décrets d’application n’ont pas encore été pris, un an après la promulgation de la loi] only in his assessment. It’s a little early to assess, usually we wait three years to do it [soit après les Jeux olympiques de Paris 2024] »adds the Altosequanese MP, who nevertheless suggests that the law, made “to be in working order for the 2024 Paris Games”, is perfectible. The text thus provides for local sports plans drawn up by the municipalities and the inter-municipalities in association with the clubs and schools of the territories. Céline Calvez wants to deepen the cooperation between the different players and even imagines, on the model of Doctolib in terms of health, the establishment of a “sportlib” for shared access to courses and local sports equipment.

Moreover, and the resignation of Noël Le Graët from the FFF at the age of 81 reminded us of this, setting an age limit on the exercise of directive functions within a sports federation is one of the hypotheses for improving law, “whether in regulatory or legislative form”says M.me Calvez.

The MP also wants to continue the work to strengthen ethics in sports federations. In a column published Thursday, March 2 in The worldMinister Amélie Oudéa-Castéra announces the establishment of“a national committee” For “strengthening ethics and democratic life in sport” who will have to make proposals by the autumn on “a governance of sport that is more ethical, more democratic and more protective of practitioners”.

Read also: Article reserved for our subscribers Amélie Oudéa-Castéra: “It is our duty to promote impeccable governance of French sport”

article updated on March 3 to specify that many decrees for the application of the sports law have still not been taken, one year after the promulgation of the text

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