It's the kind of event you won't soon forget.
One autumn evening, a year ago, Laurianne Rossi, then a deputy for La République en Marche, was in the middle of a debate on the LCI set.
The routine, one more appointment in his agenda as elected Hauts-de-Seine.
A few hours later, her daughter was born, a few weeks early.
And, naturally, comes to upset the daily life of the parliamentarian, also quaestor of the National Assembly.
But not for very long.
"Three days after giving birth, I was already on a videoconference
," she recalls.
The life of an elected official does not end once he becomes a parent.”
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Requests from elected officials continue to pour in, as do requests from residents of his constituency.
And the idea of taking a few days off is far from necessary.
It is that the regulations of the National Assembly were not designed for pregnant deputies.
If the latter decide to take maternity leave, their seat will be empty and their vote…
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