Manuel Bompard savors his moment.
After the tensions of the start of the school year linked to a scandal of domestic violence affecting the deputy Adrien Quatennens, or to the differences within the Nupes, all opportunities are good to take.
Wednesday, not far from the Assembly, the deputy of Bouches-du-Rhône, elected in the spring, has his eyes turned towards the Élysée.
Emmanuel Macron receives the German Chancellor, Olaf Scholz.
With Jean-Luc Mélenchon, Manuel Bompard has maintained for years that the relationship must be more frank and tougher against the German neighbors.
He can only be satisfied that the masks are
“finally”
falling at a time of strong Franco-German tensions.
"It is
," he said,
the confirmation of a diagnosis that has often been caricatured in the mouth of Jean-Luc Mélenchon.
That of a France which must oppose German budgetary orthodoxy, whose interests are not ours.
Enough to reinforce the discourse of the Insoumis on a desirable disobedience to the European treaties...
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