On May 15, 1962, during a press conference, Charles de Gaulle anticipated the political future once he was no longer president: “What is to be feared, (…) is not the political vacuum, it's rather the overflow!
» Sixty later, the threat still hangs over the Gaullist party.
On October 1, in Valence (Drôme), Laurent Wauquiez said he was “ready” for the presidential election of 2027.
The rest after this ad
“Yes, I can go there in 2027,” said the mayor of Cannes David Lisnard, on October 3, on the occasion of the inauguration of a new HQ on rue des entrepreneurs in Paris.
“I fully intend to be a candidate in 2027,” Xavier Bertrand in turn assumed on February 3 in Ouest France, between the pear of the agricultural crisis and the cheese of the ministerial reshuffle.
Subscribe
Already subscribed?
To log in