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French Right Demands Spain's Expulsion From Schengen Over Mass Immigration Regularization

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Marine Le Pen

PARIS/MADRID — Leading figures of the French right have launched an unprecedented political offensive against Spain, demanding its expulsion from the Schengen border-free zone in response to Madrid's extraordinary regularization program for undocumented immigrants. The campaign, spearheaded by presidential contenders and senior lawmakers, frames Spain's policy as a fundamental breach of European solidarity and a direct threat to France's internal security.

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At the center of the controversy is Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez's decision to launch a large-scale regularization process, which has already received over 60,000 applications in its first week. French conservative leaders argue that the measure will trigger secondary migration flows toward France, overwhelming border controls and social services.

Bruno Retailleau: "Isolate Spain If Necessary"

Bruno Retailleau, leader of the center-right party Les Républicains (LR) and a declared candidate for the 2027 French presidential election, issued the sharpest condemnation. The former Interior Minister described Sánchez's decision as "an enormous problem that attacks the very spirit of Europe."

Retailleau proposed a radical response should Madrid maintain its course: "If I were president, I would isolate Spain from the rest of European nations and restore border controls. That decision is contrary to the European spirit."

He warned of a potential "Mexicanization" of the Franco-Spanish border—a reference to the heavily fortified frontier between the United States and Mexico—suggesting that uncontrolled migration could transform the Pyrenees into a zone of permanent tension. Retailleau emphasized that while the rest of the continent moves toward stricter migration legislation, Spain has become "an uncontrolled entry point that threatens the stability of its neighbors."

Under EU law, member states retain the right to temporarily reintroduce border controls in cases of serious threat to public policy or internal security. Retailleau argued that France is legally authorized to act unilaterally if migration pressures escalate.

Marine Le Pen and the National Rally: "Protect France"

The far-right National Rally (Rassemblement National, RN), led by Marine Le Pen, has amplified the criticism. Le Pen urged the French government to "protect itself" from what she characterized as "suicidal migratory waves encouraged by Madrid."

The pressure has moved beyond rhetoric. RN lawmakers, including deputy Laure Lavalette, have formally submitted a parliamentary request calling for Spain's exclusion from the Schengen Area. For the RN, the absence of rigorous border management in Spain is not merely a domestic policy choice but "a betrayal" that endangers the entire European Union.

"When one country opens its doors without coordination, it forces its neighbors to bear the consequences," a RN spokesperson stated. "Schengen is based on mutual trust and shared standards. Spain is breaking that pact."

Eric Ciotti: "A Suicidal Decision"

Eric Ciotti, mayor of Nice and a leading figure in the emerging Union of the Right, joined the chorus of condemnation. Ciotti labeled Sánchez's regularization measure "suicidal" and "a direct betrayal of European partners."

He has called on Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu's government to adopt a firm stance ensuring that Spanish decisions do not further strain France's social and security systems. "Our system is already faltering under the weight of uncontrolled immigration," Ciotti asserted. "We cannot accept that policies decided in Madrid end up being paid for by French taxpayers and communities."

Ciotti has specifically highlighted concerns about the Mediterranean coastline, noting that relaxed regularization criteria in Spain could incentivize new migration routes through the western Mediterranean, with France as a final destination.

What Schengen Rules Actually Say

The Schengen Area, comprising 29 European countries, eliminates internal border checks to allow free movement of people. However, the framework includes safeguard clauses:

  • Temporary border controls: Member states may reintroduce checks for up to six months in case of serious threats to public policy or internal security, with possible extensions under exceptional circumstances.
  • Persistent deficiencies: If a country is found to be seriously neglecting its external border obligations, the EU Council may recommend measures, including the temporary reintroduction of internal borders by other states.
  • No expulsion mechanism: Crucially, the Schengen acquis contains no provision for expelling a member state. Suspension of participation would require a treaty change, which demands unanimous consent—including from the country in question.

Legal experts note that while political pressure can mount, actually removing a country from Schengen is legally near-impossible without that country's agreement.

Spanish Government Response: "Sovereign Decision Within EU Framework"

The Spanish government has rejected the French right's demands, emphasizing that the regularization program complies with EU law and international obligations.

"Spain exercises its sovereign right to manage migration within the framework of European and international law," a spokesperson for the Spanish Prime Minister's Office stated. "Our regularization process is transparent, conditional, and subject to security checks. It is not an 'open doors' policy, as some mischaracterize it."

Madrid has also pointed out that many EU countries have implemented similar regularization mechanisms in the past, including France, Italy, and Portugal. The Spanish government argues that integrating long-term undocumented residents strengthens social cohesion, reduces informal labor, and improves security oversight.

Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez has framed the measure as part of a broader European approach: "Migration is a shared challenge. The solution is not isolation or punishment, but cooperation, responsibility, and respect for human dignity."

Broader EU Context: Migration at the Heart of Political Divides The Franco-Spanish dispute reflects deeper fractures within the European Union over migration policy. While southern member states like Spain, Italy, and Greece bear the brunt of first arrivals, northern and central countries often resist mandatory relocation mechanisms.

Recent years have seen a shift toward stricter asylum rules at the EU level, including the adoption of the New Pact on Migration and Asylum. However, implementation remains uneven, and national policies continue to diverge.

France has itself conducted large-scale regularizations in the past, most notably under President Nicolas Sarkozy in 2009–2010. Critics of the current French right's stance note this historical precedent, though supporters argue that today's migration dynamics and security concerns are fundamentally different.

Expert Analysis: Political Posturing vs. Legal Reality

Migration policy analysts observe that the French right's demands serve multiple political purposes:

  • Domestic positioning: With presidential elections approaching in 2027, figures like Retailleau and Le Pen are consolidating their credentials as tough on immigration.
  • European leverage: Pressuring Spain may be intended to extract concessions on broader EU migration reforms or border funding.
  • Symbolic framing: Casting Spain as a "rule-breaker" reinforces a narrative of national sovereignty versus supranational permissiveness.

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However, most experts consider actual expulsion from Schengen highly improbable. "The legal barriers are immense, and the political cost for France would be substantial," noted a Brussels-based EU affairs analyst. "This is primarily a rhetorical escalation, though it could lead to unilateral border measures that strain bilateral relations."