Nascent inclinations, after all, have inexplicable charms.
On February 14, Saint Valentine's Day, the conservative youth meets in the premises of the very right-wing magazine
L'Incorrect
, to offer a cross interview.
Around the table, two suit jackets and a Fred Perry polo shirt.
Stanislas Rigault, president of "Generation Z", Guilhem Carayon, leader of the "Young Republicans", and Pierre-Romain Thionnet, boss of the "National Youth Rally" (RNJ).
The youth of the right, it is them.
From the toughest trend to a more moderate line, they are the faces of the commitment of a new generation.
If they each ride for their party and display differences of approach, they do not hesitate to pose together on the cover of the magazine.
The "sanitary cord", theorized dike between the traditional right of government and the far right, takes a hit.
Part of the older generation too, accustomed to the Republican front and speechless in front of these young people...
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