The socialist candidate crosses a new turbulence zone, within his campaign team, that she readjusted, and in her relationship with the Socialist Party.
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This Thursday, January 13 is a great day for Anne Hidalgo. Towards 11:30 am, in Paris, in a fashionable cultural place near Lyon station, the socialist candidate in the presidential election must unveil his project. She has talked about it for weeks, polite her as the jewel of her application. The fatal weapon that could, she hopes, overthrow the campaign against his opponents on the left. This program is also its last ammunition.
No luck, the same day, Thursday, teachers, on strike, mobilize in whole France, and the formalization of this famous project could rise to the media hatch. But the candidate did not want to shift the event.
The entirety of its seventy propositions is structured around three axes: work, ecological mutation and institutional reforms. A classical social democratic program, resolutely from left, remotely from an ecologist radicality and a “at the same time” macronian.
Need new blood
Among the measures include the increase in SMIC by 15%, the creation of a major Ministry of the Environment and the Economy, the institutionalization of a referendum of citizen initiative or the granting a check of 5,000 euros for the French and the French 18 years. A serious, reasonable program, but perhaps lacking from a daring and a spectacular able to pulse the ultimate revival of a candidate who is nevertheless much to lose.
The Mayor of Paris hears mostly musculate the after-sales service. To popularize his project, translate it into audible and printable slogans, she decided to readjust her campaign team. Tuesday, January 11, she chaired a new political council. She thanked her “French team of mayors and elected” for four months. But to pay tribute with effusion is never a good sign. She explained to them especially that she needed new blood.
The candidate has welcomed a dozen reinforcements. Including the former Emmanuelle Emmanuelle Minister Luc, the former member of Val-de-Marne Luc Carvounas, or the members of the Socialist Party (PS) Rachid Temal, Patrick Mennucci, who was Deputy Director of the Ségolène Royal in 2007, Hélène Geoffroy and Philippe Doucet. These last four present the particularity of being opponents declared to Olivier Faure, the boss of the PS, absent from the meeting, who did not take much well. The historics of the campaign team either.
An application that desperately stagnates
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