A senior aide to French President Nicolas Sarkozy today defended culture minister Frederic Mitterrand who is facing calls for his resignation for having written about paying boys for sex.
The revelations, made in a 2005 autobiography The Bad Life,resurfaced after Mr Mitterrand passionately defended film-maker Roman Polanski, who faces deportation from Switzerland were he was arrested to the United States for having had sex with a 13-year-old girl in 1977.
Politicians from all parties have criticised Mr Mitterrand for his attack on the United States. The far-right National Front party has called for him to step down.
"French political debate sometimes takes on a pathetic form. It's excessive and quite undignified," Sarkozy adviser Henri Guaino said on France 2 television.
Asked whether Mr Mitterrand should resign, he said: "When there is a controversy as pathetic as this, with so much delay, I don't think there should be such drastic consequences."
Mr Guaino said there were no facts to back up the accusations and Mr Mitterrand had not been subject to any legal complaints.
The experiences in the book are presented as a mixture of straight autobiography and more dreamlike reflection.
"I got into the habit of paying for boys," Mr Mitterrand wrote, adding that his attraction to young male prostitutes continued even though he knew "the sordid details of this traffic".
"All these rituals of the market for youths, the slave market excited me enormously ... the abundance of very attractive and immediately available young boys put me in a state of desire."
Mr Mitterrand is the nephew of former socialist president Francois Mitterrand and was drafted into Mr Sarkozy's centre-right cabinet in June.
Although he was not a Socialist, his surname still reverberates in France and carries a lot of clout. Mr Sarkozy was delighted to have brought him on board, but now faces unease within his own UMP party over his choice of minister.
France considers itself to be at the forefront of the fight against sex tourism but Mr Guaino said Mr Mitterrand would not compromise this position.
"I have not heard Frederic Mitterrand say anything against France's position of fighting sex tourism," Mr Guaino said.
Interior Minister Brice Hortefeux said Mr Mitterrand was respected for his competence in the role of culture minister.
Although still openly siding with Polanski, Mr Mitterrand has toned down his language, saying his emotions overtook him the day he heard that Switzerland had arrested the film director.
Reuters