Alain Maurice Jacques Duhamel (born 31 May 1940) is a prominent French journalist and political commentator. In 1963, Duhamel started working at Le Monde. He started giving talks on Europe 1 from 1974. He has also written in Libération since 1992, and in Les Dernières Nouvelles d'Alsace. Duhamel has also hosted several television political broadcasts: À armes égales from 1970, Cartes sur table on Antenne 2 from 1978, succeeded by L'Heure de vérité, and eventually 100 minutes pour convaincre from 2002, as well as Question Ouverte. During the French presidential election of 1995, Duhamel, along with fellow journalist Guillaume Durand, hosted the television debate between Jacques Chirac and Lionel Jospin. Duhamel has also worked with RTL from 1999. In 2006, Duhamel published Les Prétendants 2007, listing 20 likely contendants of the French presidential election of 2007, and notably ignoring Ségolène Royal. Duhamel persisted in denying that Royal was a likely contendant, even as she rose in popularity. He eventually included a chapter on the pocket edition of the book. On November 27, 2006, during a talk at Sciences Po, Duhamel stated his intention to vote for François Bayrou. A video of the event was released on Dailymotion, and Duhamel was suspended from his activities at France 2 and RTL until the end of the campaign. In 2009, Duhamel released La Marche Consultaire, a book which made comparisons between Nicolas Sarkozy and Napoleon. Source: Article "Alain Duhamel" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.
Birthday: May 31, 1940
May 03, 2022
February 20, 2002
November 18, 1998
July 21, 2007
January 11, 2012
June 16, 1976
April 04, 2007
January 07, 2022
July 13, 2020
January 16, 2016
June 09, 2011
November 06, 2019
November 30, 2011
May 11, 2021
October 05, 2019
January 25, 2014
October 02, 2019
January 30, 2017
January 11, 2021
September 24, 2022
February 02, 2006
January 09, 2012
September 12, 2016
March 07, 1993
September 22, 1992
January 10, 1975
September 06, 2009
September 07, 2009