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French President Emmanuel Macron has been forced to deny his disgraced ex-bodyguard was his gay lover and giving him the country's nuclear codes.

Alexandre Benalla was sacked last week after video footage showed him hitting a male May Day protester and dragging away a woman while he was off duty and wearing a riot helmet and police tags.

He is not a serving police officer and detectives are now investigating how he came into possession of official equipment.

The scandal has gripped France, with police even raiding Macron's official Elysee Palace as they investigate Benalla's actions.

Now Macron has issued an extraordinary denial that ex-police reservist Benalla was his lover - or that he had given him the nuclear codes.

(Image: AFP)

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Denying the rumours, the president said: "No, Alexandre Benalla did not have the nuclear codes... no, Benalla was not my lover," according to Le Parisien .

Benalla said in a newspaper interview yesterday he had made a "big mistake" that had been exploited by his boss's enemies.

Critics say Macron's office failed to properly punish Benalla, or refer him promptly to judicial authorities over the incident.

Benalla told Le Monde in his first interview since the crisis erupted that "politicians and police" had used the incident for their own ends.

(Image: AFP)

"I was the weak link ... my case has been used to settle scores, it's taken on proportions... I won't say I was the fall-guy, I'm just saying it served various interests, an interest to get at the president of the republic," Benalla said.

Opposition lawmakers have launched a united offensive against Macron, 40, saying his handling of the case shows he has lost touch with ordinary people since taking office 14 months ago.

Benalla is now the target of a judicial investigation and there are also probes under way in the upper and lower houses of parliament into how Macron's office dealt with the incident.

Outraged by the refusal of Macron's party to allow key members of his office to be questioned in the lower house, all opposition parties withdrew their participation from the investigation.

(Image: AFP)

Macron remained unapologetic and defiant on Thursday.

"I think this a storm in a teacup," he said during a visit to the Pyrenees in southwestern France. "It's not affecting me, don't worry. I'm here with my fellow citizens."

Benalla, who said he did not feel betrayed by the president, gave an insight into life at the Elysee.

Macron's top-down leadership, in sharp contrast to his predecessor Francois Hollande's much-mocked "Mr Normal" style, has increasingly grated with his opponents.

"Everything at the Elysee is based on how close people think you are to the president. Did he smile at you, call you by your name, etcetera. It's a court phenomenon," Benalla told Le Monde.