Despite a contested record, the Prime Minister remains popular. Gabriel Attal wants to place himself this Thursday to mark the hundredth day of his appointment.

News items, against a backdrop of protests against secularism, are multiplying. Those around him are worried about “A Clockwork Orange's atmosphere” that emerges from the litany of media-covered acts of violence, as it suggests that those in power ultimately have no control over events. The former Minister of National Education would have seemed to instigate a paradigm shift. Alas, as the head of government closes his first quarter on Rue de Varenne, the voluntarism demonstrated by Gabriel Attal through offensive communication is put to the test. The Prime Minister will try to dispel doubts with a new speech in Viry-Châtillon (Essonne), where a 15-year-old teenager died at the beginning of the month, beaten by several minors. He will also travel to Paris to give a speech at the Sorbonne University.