Governance Crisis Hits French Alps 2030: Éric Ciotti to Meet Edgar Grospiron Amid Leadership Turmoil
The road to the 2030 Winter Olympics is hitting a significant roadblock. In a move to stabilize a fracturing organizing committee, Éric Ciotti has announced a meeting with Edgar Grospiron this coming Monday in Nice to “find solutions” for the mounting crisis surrounding the French Alps 2030 Games.
The meeting comes at a critical juncture for the organization. Grospiron, the president of the organizing committee (Cojop), is facing increasing isolation as internal conflicts reach a breaking point. Reports indicate that the unity between Grospiron and Director General Cyril Linette has completely collapsed, turning a professional partnership into a public liability.
A Leadership in Freefall
The tension within the Cojop has shifted from quiet disagreement to an open rift. According to reports from Le Parisien, Grospiron and Linette have not spoken for several weeks. The situation reached a climax last week during the Milan-Cortina 2026 games, where the “divorce” between the two leaders was reportedly acted out in front of representatives from the International Olympic Committee (IOC).
The timing is particularly damaging. As the 2026 games conclude and the transition to the French Alps 2030 cycle begins, the organizing committee’s leadership is in shambles. Employees who traveled to Italy to learn from the Milan-Cortina organizers may return to France to find their president gone, as Grospiron’s departure is now described as “inevitable.”
This is not the first time the organization’s stability has been questioned. In February 2026, Grospiron appeared before the French Senate, where he openly acknowledged a “governance crisis” within the committee, though he attempted to downplay the severity of its impact at the time.
The Stakes for the 2030 Winter Games
The internal chaos threatens the preparation for one of the most ambitious winter sporting events in French history. Officially known as the XXVI Olympic Winter Games and branded as French Alps 2030 (or Alpes 2030), the event is scheduled to run from February 1 to February 17, 2030.
The Games are designed to be a regional effort, spreading events across two major French administrative regions: Provence-Alpes-Côte d’Azur (PACA) and Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes (Aura). The specific departments involved include:
- Alpes-Maritimes and Hautes-Alpes: Located in the PACA region.
- Haute-Savoie and Savoie: Located in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region.
Nice, the prefecture of the Alpes-Maritimes, is set to be a primary hub for the event. The city is expected to host approximately 20 events, including nearly all of the ice competitions. For a city investing so heavily in infrastructure and logistics, a leadership vacuum at the top of the organizing committee creates significant uncertainty.
A Fragile Coalition
The crisis is not merely a clash of personalities but a failure of a complex partnership. The French Alps bid was built on a foundation of collaboration between the French State, the French Olympic and Paralympic Committees, and the regional governments of Sud and Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes. This coalition was the driving force that led the IOC’s Future Host Commission to nominate the French Alps as the preferred candidate in November 2023, with final approval granted during the 142nd IOC Session in Paris on July 24, 2024.

With the “unity of façade” now gone, the founding members of the bid—including state and regional officials—are reportedly using their presence in Italy to discuss the future of the leadership. The Monday meeting in Nice represents a high-stakes attempt to reconcile these interests before the governance crisis causes permanent damage to the project’s timeline.
Key Facts: French Alps 2030
| Official Name | XXVI Olympic Winter Games |
| Dates | February 1–17, 2030 |
| Primary Hubs | Nice (approx. 20 events), Hautes-Alpes, Savoie, Haute-Savoie |
| Key Figures | Edgar Grospiron (President), Cyril Linette (Director General) |
The upcoming meeting in Nice is the next confirmed checkpoint for the organization. Whether Éric Ciotti and Edgar Grospiron can “find solutions” or if the meeting serves as a formal prelude to Grospiron’s exit remains to be seen. For the athletes and the cities preparing for 2030, the priority is a stable administration that can deliver on the promises made to the IOC.
What do you think about the leadership turmoil facing the 2030 Winter Games? Share your thoughts in the comments below.