Can a Minister of Education leave his personal ideas in the locker room when he arrives at Rue de Grenelle?
I was lucky not to have to.
A lifelong Gaullist, I found myself in my political family with projects already firmly matured and well anchored in republican universalism: reform of the professional path, duplication of preparatory courses, fight against illiteracy, rejection of communitarianism.
Basically, Jean-Michel Blanquer was on the same line, his concern for universalism and his hostility to wokism having cost him his post, which will remain as an inglorious task in the decisions of Emmanuel Macron.
The new Minister of Education, Pap Ndiaye, also has strong ideas, which is obviously his right.
His analyzes are sufficiently documented in his books and his public speeches for us to be able to quote them without distorting his remarks.
For example, according to him,
“the French genius too often hides a chauvinistic universalism…
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