It is also in this type of detail that we sense an air of change.
Shortly after the arrival of Gabriel Attal at Matignon, the Tuesday vegetarian menu, imposed by Élisabeth Borne in her time, was removed.
A decision taken by the new prime minister's chief of staff, a young faithful not so keen on plates of quinoa salad.
By its age, its tone, its communication, its taste for political games, and even in the contents of the plates, the Attal style contrasts with the Borne era.
And the change is also felt in relations with Emmanuel Macron.
So much so that, barely more than a month after his appointment, those around him are already buzzing with tensions between a president who wants to remain in office until the end and a prime minister determined to live his role to the fullest.
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The differences appeared very quickly, from the appointment of the first part of the government in January.
Where Gabriel Attal would have relieved the team of a few heavyweights, in order to better assert himself, Emmanuel…
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