“Everything stopped overnight.”
The words of this ministerial advisor testify to the abysmal void felt by many of his colleagues who have no longer had a job since their delegate minister or secretary of state was not reappointed in the first version of Gabriel Attal's government.
Since January 11, the day the great upheaval was revealed, these collaborators have been stamping their feet with impatience and pacing back and forth at home.
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Agriculture, work, health, school... What to remember from Gabriel Attal's general policy speech
“From the moment there are no more delegated ministers, there is no longer a team, and therefore no more advisors,”
confirms a colleague, who, for the anecdote, has not emptied her office when leaving.
“It’s the Coué method,”
she quips.
The diagonal of the void.
Even if most remain in contact with their ex-colleagues and make a point of responding to the Élysée and Matignon on the files for which they were previously responsible (housing, industry, transport, etc.) and above all have written notes for the preparation of the general policy speech
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