French minister Bruno Le Roux quits in summer jobs row Published duration 21 March 2017 Related Topics France elections 2017

image copyright AP image caption Bruno Le Roux said he did not want the investigation to "undermine the work of the government"

French Interior Minister Bruno Le Roux has resigned over a "fake jobs" row involving work he gave his two daughters when they were teenagers.

Mr Le Roux told a news conference that he felt it was his "responsibility", but denied wrongdoing.

It is alleged that his daughters were being paid for work while involved in other activities.

The Socialist minister has repeatedly insisted that the summer jobs were legitimate.

French President Francois Hollande said he had accepted Mr Le Roux's resignation and named Trade Minister Matthias Fekl as his successor.

Centre-right presidential candidate Francois Fillon is already under investigation for employing his family.

That probe has now been widened to include possible forgery and aggravated fraud, French media report.

Investigators are looking at whether Mr Fillon and his wife Penelope forged documents to try to justify the €700,000 ($755,000; £610,000) she was given for work as a parliamentary assistant that she is alleged not to have carried out.

Now Le Canard Enchaine newspaper - which broke the allegations about the jobs for Mr Fillon's family - has reported that a Lebanese billionaire paid a firm owned by Mr Fillon $50,000 for helping to arrange a meeting in 2015 with Russian President Vladimir Putin and Total's CEO Patrick Pouyanne.

Mr Fillon's campaign team told the AFP news agency that "the suspicions of conflict of interest are totally unfounded".

Initially the favourite to win the presidential election in April and May, Mr Fillon is now running third in the opinion polls.

What makes a minister's resignation minor news - analysis by Hugh Schofield, BBC News, Paris

image copyright EPA image caption The investigation involving Francois Fillon makes Mr Le Roux's resignation a minor news story

In normal times this would be a monumental embarrassment for the French government. The interior minister has been found employing his two daughters as parliamentary helpers, and paying them a lot of public money.

There may not legally be anything wrong with what he did - though the prosecutor will need to check that out thoroughly - but the look of the thing is awful.

While still at school, these daughters of the French nomenklatura were able to start very substantial savings accounts.

It would be embarrassing - but in fact the Socialist government is worse than a lame duck. It is a duck with both legs snapped at the knee. In the upcoming presidential elections, it has no representative. In a few weeks it will simply disappear.

So the resignation of a minister is minor news. Except perhaps for Francois Fillon, who can hope to extract a little comfort from the discomfiture.

Mr Le Roux, 51, said he did not want the investigation into the contracts linked to his daughters to "undermine the work of the government".

"I've made it a point of honour to respect my title as a deputy, and all the responsibilities that come with it," he said, adding: "I have always been honest in my relationships with others and in all my political actions."

His daughters began working for him when they were 15 or 16, and between them amassed 24 fixed-term contracts that paid out €55,000 ($60,000; £48,000).

The allegations against Mr Le Roux surfaced in the Quotidien TV programme on Monday, when a reporter approached the minister asking about holiday jobs he had paid his daughters for between 2009 and 2016.

Employing family members is common practice in France's National Assembly and is lawful. However, the programme reported that two of the contracts coincided with an internship and a pre-study course.

One daughter held a three-month internship during the summer of 2013 at Belgian company Yves Le Rocher, Quotidien reported.

Mr Le Roux's office said all the jobs the girls were paid for were completed.