Valérie Pécresse could have endorsed this sentence from Emmanuel Macron taken up by Philippe Besson in his book (
A character from a novel,
Julliard) on the 2017 campaign:
“So much aggressiveness is suspicious, isn't it?
These people, basically, are merchants who hold a bit of a street.
They think they have a license.”
At that time, the candidate Macron embodied the one who was going to shake up the political system and enjoyed being the target of attacks from the right but also from the left.
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Presidential 2022: how Valérie Pécresse seeks to counter the Macronist temptation
After her meeting at the Zénith de Paris, Sunday February 13, Valérie Pécresse was the target of a flood of criticism and insane mockery.
Several days later, Bruno Retailleau is still flabbergasted at having had to justify on BFMTV that yes, of course, she would go to the end of the campaign.
Around the candidate, some even thought of a plot intended to weaken her, relayed by some internal politicians, suspected of preparing the post-presidential.
Sarkozysts have been pointed out from…
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