A vial of bedbugs in hand, the leader of the Insoumise deputies, Mathilde Panot, targets the government: "These little insects spread despair in our country," she rears in front of the prime minister. "There are subjects that should not lend themselves to controversy," retorts this one, in yet another pass of arms with the Wetlands. Since the return of the deputies last week, Elisabeth Borne plunges back into the parliamentary tunnel that will confine her to the small intrigues of the Palais Bourbon. From a coup d'éclat to a 49.3, from a recess to a motion of censure, the Prime Minister has at least until Christmas - the expected end of the budget debates.
An ordeal that she already went through last year in pain, and that she apprehends once again. "We could imagine that after the holidays, everyone would come back appeased. This is not the case, grumbled Elisabeth Borne. Parliament takes me a lot of time but it's a stimulating configuration"...
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