Former Macronist MP Eva Son-Forget revealed this Monday in an interview that she had started a gender transition.
“A call for tolerance and freedom to choose one’s gender identity.” In an interview with Blick on Monday, November 18, former LREM MP Joachim Son-Forget revealed that she had made a gender transition. If her transformation was first physical, with shaved hair, ear pendants and makeup, it was then administrative. The one, who supported Eric Zemmour in the 2022 presidential election, decided to change her name and call herself Eva.
Refusal to comply under the influence of cocaine
“It wasn't easy to choose, but I like Eva, a reference to Eve, created from a rib of Adam. She immediately did stupid things,” she explained. A reference linked to her, because the former LREM parliamentarian was not very wise on her side either. Last June, she was arrested by the police after refusing to comply, in the 7th arrondissement of Paris.
At the wheel of a powerful sedan, she hit a parked vehicle after fleeing at high speed through the streets of the French capital. During her arrest, she tested positive for cocaine and the police seized 0.7 grams of the same drug from her. The former elected official therefore chose her new first name in reference to her setbacks.
But this is not the only time where the former member of the Socialist Party has been able to talk about her. In 2018, she violently attacked Europe Ecology the Greens senator Esther Benbassa. “With the pot of makeup that you put on your head, you embody more than ever what you are clumsily trying to caricature,” she criticized on X, formerly Twitter.
She also distinguished herself by relaying the sexual video of the former candidate for Paris mayor, Benjamin Griveaux, in February 2020.
The anger of those around him
On the other hand, by expressing her wish for transition, Eva Son-Forge had provoked the anger of those around her. The latter had “decided to begin a process of compulsory psychiatrization against me,” she revealed to the Swiss media. But nothing to slow down the former MP who intends to live her life as she wishes. Disowned by those around her, she admits that this recognition helps her today in her transition.
For her, “when your transition is recognized by others, it becomes reality.” “It’s a process that involves my life, that exposes me and my children. I would not speak out openly if it were not crucial for me, but especially for others, weaker than me, who cannot live their life as they dream of it. It is a call for tolerance and freedom to choose one’s gender identity,” she insisted in the Swiss media.