While Michel Barnier's successor has just been appointed, singer Michel Sardou, retired, continues to look at the French political situation, and does not fail to comment on it.
France now has its fourth Prime Minister of the year, a record for the Fifth Republic. Despite retiring a few months ago, singer Michel Sardou examines the political crisis that France is going through, and also commented on it without filter, during an interview for “12.45” of M6.
“Good for his face”
When journalist Nathalie Renoux asked him what he would say in a song about the situation in France at the moment, the septuagenarian had an answer that was explicit to say the least: “She wouldn't be gentle”relays RTL.
Nearly ten days ago, the Barnier government was censored after the adoption of a widely voted motion in the National Assembly.
Michel Sardou has a strong opinion on what happened. “Finally, it's good for his face. It's us who wanted that, but we've been like that since Julius Caesar. If he returned to Gaulle so easily, it's because they [les Gaulois] couldn't prank each other. So, what do we have today? We don't have Caesar…”
But as for the current situation, the singer prefers to laugh about it. “France today…, I preferred mine, underlines the artist. As always, we always prefer our youth. When we say 'it was better before', that's bullshit. It was our youth who was better before. But now… I'm a little lost, I don't know what I would write maybe I would like the messy side.he laments with humor.
End of suspense
Emmanuel Macron has finally decided after long consultations to find a successor to Michel Barnier, overthrown by deputies last week, the presidency announced.
“The President of the Republic appointed Mr. François Bayrou Prime Minister, and tasked him with forming a government,” according to a press release from the Elysée.
The 73-year-old boss and founder of the MoDem, first ally of the Head of State and figure of the center, will have the difficult task of forming a government capable of surviving the threat of censorship from a National Assembly without a majority bloc, and to adopt a budget of which France is currently deprived for 2025.
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