“He allows himself to do so because she’s a woman” (Les Grandes Gueules)

“He allows himself to do so because she’s a woman” (Les Grandes Gueules)
“He allows himself to do so because she’s a woman” (Les Grandes Gueules)

After Gabriel Attal’s surprise intervention in front of European candidate Valérie Hayer this Monday, this sequence is perceived as sexist by teacher Barbara Lefebvre in “Les Grandes Gueules” on RMC.

The intervention of Prime Minister Gabriel Attal on the - set this Monday, June 4, while the head of the Renaissance list for the European elections Valérie Hayer was questioned, is perceived as sexism by some.

“The king and the prince-consort speak when they please, the man or woman, in this case Ms. Hayer, must submit, as do the journalists,” said history and geography professor Barbara Lefebvre. , In The Big Mouths.

“However, I’m not the ‘sexism every 5 minutes’ type, but I think that if their candidate was a candidate, they wouldn’t dare to do what they’re doing. I’m convinced of that. They’re doing it. allow because she is a woman,” added the professor.

“They don’t trust him.”

“Besides, I think that Ms. Borne (former Prime Minister) would not have done that to another woman,” Barbara Lefebvre also said. “We must not believe that women in politics are little angels, they are as tough as men, but I think we still have respect. And more for your candidate!”

I find that they make her sympathetic on the other hand (…) because they use her as a doormat.”

“I find that the untimely interventions of Emmanuel Macron and Gabriel Attal when it comes to Valérie Hayer are borderline sexist,” feminist activist Élise Goldfarb also judged in Estelle Midi. “We have the impression that they don’t trust her, and that they are like: ‘She’s worthless, we’re going to speak for her’.”

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