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Partners in censoring Michel Barnier this Wednesday, December 4, the two parties are also increasing their strategic disagreements and seem destined to go their separate ways.
These internal adversaries often say it “too soft”, too much “submissive to the rebellious”. However, this Wednesday, December 4, in an interview with Monde, the first secretary of the Socialist Party, Olivier Faure, did not hesitate to bare his claws against the Mélenchonist movement. A few hours before a motion of censure which should overthrow the Prime Minister, Michel Barnier, the deputy for Seine-et-Marne explained that he wanted to seek “compromise” to allow the left to govern, when the rebels, according to him, are “taking refuge in a purely protesting attitude”. “A fundamental divergence”, he says, which seems like a new distancing from La France insoumise. And reveals, once again, the fragility of the New Popular Front which could meet the same end as the New Ecological and Social Popular Union at the end of 2023.
While the Prime Minister's censorship will throw the political class into the unknown, the PS and LFI already know precisely what they intend to do next. The Mélenchonists have warned, for those it will be “Lucie Castets, nothing but Lu
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