The subject is a priori the most consensual, but its political steering is most complicated. By tackling fraud - tax today, social in a fortnight - Gabriel Attal knows that he meets a desire unanimously shared in public opinion. After the trying, divisive and necessarily unpopular sequence of the pension reform, the Minister of Public Accounts puts on the table a subject of rebound that is not a subject of diversion. It is precious for the head of state, and it is useful for the youngest member of the government, aware that there is nothing better than a symbolic theme to make a leap in notoriety - eleven interviews in two days! - and in popularity.
But public skepticism is as strong as its demand for it. Attal is not the prime minister, and far from it, to commit to fighting fraud. A few high-profile examples will never be enough to convince us that the time for impunity is over. And how many candidates don't have...
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