After Patrick Poivre d'Arvor, Magali Berdah or the secretary general of the Élysée Palace Alexis Kohler, France 2 devoted to
Sandrine Rousseau
a "Complementary investigation" (visible in replay), on April 13th.
MP EELV, who had lent herself to the game of the interview, had agreed to be filmed at the National Assembly and authorized the magazine's teams to contact her father, expressed on Europe 1 the "anger" that
inspires
her this picture.
In a recording broadcast during the morning show "Culture Médias", Sandrine Rousseau explains:
"We begin a portrait with the opinion of a dad who must do a kind of self-criticism of the education he gave me. would have given.
As if the fight I am leading for gender equality would be a fight that would find its source in the relationship with my father.
We don't do that to men."
“My father was flabbergasted”
In the
“Complementary investigation”
, the father of the deputy had actually been questioned about the education given to Sandrine Rousseau, this
“serious child who immediately did her homework on returning home”
.
The former tax inspector, visibly full of affection for his daughter, assured that she had been treated in the same way as her brothers and cousins, with whom she lived.
At least, that was his feeling.
Sandrine Rousseau, in the same "Complementary investigation" had delivered a contrary point of view:
"I lived different injunctions"
, she assures.
Those not to say bad words or not to run, because, according to her grandmother, these attitudes
“were not feminine”
.
“I built myself around feminism
,” she insists.
If we believe these words, his political fight has to do with the education received.
What she now seems to deny on Europe 1.
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“My father was interrogated for almost four hours, he told me, and they kept a short sentence
, continues Sandrine Rousseau in “Culture Médias”.
I spoke to him on the phone and he was flabbergasted.
I am really very angry that in 2023, on a public television channel, we are still making portraits of women politicians where we question their dad to find out who these women are.
The portrait, moreover, essentially bears on the question of character and not on the question of the political battles that I lead
.