Relaunch an ill-born five-year term, looking like the end of a reign.
This is the difficult business to which Emmanuel Macron, re-elected for just a year, is engaged.
To do this, the Head of State has set a course of
"one hundred days".
He also set himself a challenge, that of responding to the malaise of the
“middle classes”.
These French people whose income is too high to claim public aid, but too low not to need it.
The very people who have the feeling of constantly having to make new efforts without ever getting anything in return.
A population to which the executive wants more than ever to address itself to, it is hoped, definitively turn the thorny page of pensions.
Read alsoGuillaume Tabard: “Emmanuel Macron still hopes to reform the institutions”
In a recent interview with readers of Le
Parisien
, the head of state was also challenged by a mother who is struggling to make ends meet in the face of inflation.
“For the middle classes, the real subject is that of dropping out or downgrading.
France to whom we say...
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