Salaries and jobs were at the heart of the communist candidate’s meeting, Sunday, Paris. A return to fundamentals for activists who have been returning, for the first time since 2007, with an autonomous candidacy in the presidential election.
by
It rains, Place Stalingrad, in the north of Paris. No matter for communist activists meeting, Sunday, November 21, at the call of their candidate for the presidential election, Fabien Roussel. The adversity, they know, the polls below 3% too, and there is a manifest pleasure to listen to the member of the North hammering the fundamentals of the party: the social and the defense of the workers. “She is beautiful the old left who stains, the one who does not give up changing the life of the workers”, begins Ian Brossat under the acclamations, taking into account the critics of Europe Ecology-la verss (EELV) with regard to of the campaign he directs.
For his first meeting since the feast of humanity, in September, the communist candidate put the work at the center of his speech. A relevant ground which has the advantage of pleases everyone among communists, unlike the themes of security or immigration, that Fabien Roussel claims to approach too. “Some people are talking about universal income, for us it is the universal work that must be guaranteed,” he launches, at a time when Yannick Jadot offers for example a citizen income from 18 years old. Favorable for the week of 32 hours, the member of the North offers zero young unemployed as early as 2023, an exceptional measure requesting companies to reserve 10% of hirings, a public service of employment guaranteeing position or training accompanied by an allocation equal to the minimum wage.
As for the SMIC, he intends to carry it to 1,500 euros net, wants to revalue the point of index Civil servants and hire 500,000, multiplying the ISF’s revenues, nationalize NPB, Société Générale and Insurance AXA, set up an exceptional “Covid” tax on the benefits of multinationals. “Above 500 000 euros, Crac, we take everything. It reminds you of something? No, but it’s fine no!” Lance Fabien Roussel, who can afford the allusions in Georges Marchais – his son, Olivier, co-pilot his campaign. To those who are surprised, Fabien Roussel replies: “It’s communism? And then (…) for me it is progress and the social republic.” As for ecology, “what pollutes the most, c Is deindustrialization, “argues the candidate, moreover in favor of a renewed nuclear park and low cost energy. It also proposes to invest in “rail and river freight, ter, metros, trams”. “No more Macron Cars, Long live the Roussel trains!”
You have 51.03% of this article to read. The rest is reserved for subscribers.