DiipuSurotu
Banned
Valls won...
Valls won...
They'd need it to form a parliamentary group because they won't be 15, so who knows?
They are divided on the issue themselves, but I can alreay see a handful of communists joining the FI group.
Valls won...
This makes me irrationally happy.For whatever it is worth, the founder of game publisher Infogrames and thus the guy who brought you such classics as Alone in the Dark, Prisoners of Ice, and Outcast, has been elected for LREM ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bruno_Bonnell ).
Still have fond memories of some of their games from the 1990s. But then they expanded like crazy, rebranded themselves as Atari, and their games started to suck until the company finally collapsed under its own weight. Hope that's not a bad omen
As expected by most people. It's stupid that FI is claiming he cheated.
So, Macron apparently sued a local paper because they leaked part of his job market reform plans (not the leaker(s), the paper itself)
Seine Minister verdonnerte Macron zu Stillschweigen. Der Élysée funktioniere als "geschlossener Hof", kommentiert die Zeitung "Le Monde". Lecks werden gnadenlos verfolgt: Als unlängst Planungen zur bevorstehenden Reform des Arbeitsrechts in der Tageszeitung "Le Parisien" veröffentlicht wurden, reagierte Macron mit autoritärer Härte.
Zunächst wurden die bekannt gewordenen Details rundweg dementiert, die Formulierungen als Teil theoretischer Erwägungen beschrieben. Zugleich erhob die Verwaltung des Arbeitsministeriums Klage gegen die Redaktion des Lokalblattes. "Da gibt es einige Personen, die das Gesetz übertreten haben", hieß es.
His department of employment sued the editorial staff of "Le Parisien" because they published plans for his job market reform.
So, Macron apparently sued a local paper because they leaked part of his job market reform plans (not the leaker(s), the paper itself), and some recent articles in reputable German press paint a rather disturbing picture of him: Equating himself to Charles de Gaulle, being full of disdain and mistrust against parties and the whole democratic process.
I'm sorry, but some parts of Macron seem like a liberal version of Trump: Someone who acts like a CEO rather than a president and sets out to ruthlessly "fix" a country like some bankrupt company, with little regard for deliberation and political process. Absolute majority for him is not good news, especially with the misproportional effects of the voting system and the extremely low voter participation.
His department of employment sued the editorial staff of "Le Parisien" because they published plans for his job market reform.
http://www.spiegel.de/politik/ausla...macron-zum-absoluten-monarchen-a-1152770.html
This SZ-Article from today does not paint him in a good light at all:
http://www.sueddeutsche.de/politik/frankreich-warum-macrons-ungeduld-gefaehrlich-ist-1.3549253-2
His style of politics gets called authoritarian liberalism and he wants to do away with both unions and political parties as much as possible, meaning, not involve them in anything and pull more or less a Thatcher on France. In his party, he is more or less the de-facto dictator.
Keep in mind that both papers are liberal/leftwing-liberal and preferred him over Melenchon and the others in the election.
Yeah sorry, aside from being able to compare himself favorable to Trump and do some good PR, this guys seems to turn out exactly like many feared and expected: Not as bad as Le Pen, but not an inch more, seems to be the definition of an extreme centrist and he has definitely a problem with how democracy works. Like I already said, his disregard for politics is a definitive similarity to Trump.
Come on, cut the crap.Not as bad as Le Pen, but not an inch more
Come on, cut the crap.
Well, in a couple months, there has already been several clashes between Macron's staff and the press (with Quotidien, for the Mali visit, etc.) Macron also wants to defend business against the press (he talked about it recently, but he also supported a law about this two years ago). I would be surprised if things went smoothly with press in the coming years.So you got so worked up and reached all these conclusions from one incident that in the end it doesn't even seem to be as you say it it?
Come on, cut the crap.
I'm sorry this view differs from the impression you, though I have to give it to him that his PR team does a good job to make him look like a nice young man compared to Trump and May, and I'm sorry that you can't grasp the dangers that arise from a president that seems to have an enormous disregard for standard political process, parties and unions and who now has an absolute majority with a party that is strictly hierarchical and solely lead by himself. The recent fuzz about the leak is only a detail, though a worrying one.
So you got so worked up and reached all these conclusions from one incident that in the end it doesn't even seem to be as you say it it?
If you want to have a discussion, then you have to learn to express yourself properly. "Not as bad as Le Pen, but not an inch more" first of all doesn't mean a thing. Then the meaning seems close to a not that better than her. And I'm sorry but that is a stupid statement. You don't build a discussion on Godwin's law equivalent like that.Are you having some kind of reading comprehension problem? I literally said that Macron is of course better as Le Pen, but that he as of now, he is exactly the lesser evil and hard-centrist many people expected him to be, which is based on reporting about his thinking and his style of governing by several reputable media outlets.
Yeah, you know exactly what I think of him and his project. I surely am a pour soul fooled by all the paris match covers and the PR, la crème de la crème. So again, cut the crap. I wasn't commenting that part but your ridiculous comparisons. But now I want to comment that too, thanks for your insight.I'm sorry this view differs from the impression you, though I have to give it to him that his PR team does a good job to make him look like a nice young man compared to Trump and May, and I'm sorry that you can't grasp the dangers that arise from a president that seems to have an enormous disregard for standard political process, parties and unions and who now has an absolute majority with a party that is strictly hierarchical and solely lead by himself. The recent fuzz about the leak is only a detail, though a worrying one.
The signs, the signs !We will see how far he gets when he starts to dismantle worker's rights and treats media and opposition in and outside of parliament as nothing but an annoying nuisance, even though the hard numbers from all three elections that he is very far away from having a majority of the population behind him. For now, Macron seems like a CEO, not a politician. The signs are definitely there.
Guys, what is happening over there with four ministers quitting the government including, now, Bayrou? Is this good news (= Macron making good on his anti-corruption promise) or bad news (= LREM's most important allied party already quitting the government)?
Guys, what is happening over there with four ministers quitting the government including, now, Bayrou? Is this good news (= Macron making good on his anti-corruption promise) or bad news (= LREM's most important allied party already quitting the government)?
Yea, that was pretty pathetic. Very expected of him though.Anti-intellectualism in a bullying tone? Mélenchon sounded like a mix between Hanouna and Le Pen. No shit young people like him.
Seriously, this verbal attack on Villani wasn't to his credit.
I´m really hoping the Modem can stay on board and keep supporting the government, and maybe join again later if they/ for those that are cleared. It would be pretty bad for the goverment to already be losing support; Besides, I agree with the demands they made when they made their agreement.
With that said, it´s Bayrou that insisted that it was necessary to "moralize" the government. No need to put these kind of reforms in danger, pretty noble of them if that´s why they left.
I guess it's better to have those people leave rather than be open to criticism by keeping them in the governement while campaigning for more morality.
I can't shake the feeling that since the Fillon affair, a can of worms have been opened and everybody is pushing his own leaks to hurt specific politicians. Feels very dirty, even if the cases are real.
Anyway, funny how the project of "pushing parts of the state of emergency into law" generated outcries that it would be an attack on privacy and liberties... and now that the outline of the project is official, it seems especially tame (basically, the police can ask for a search, but you're free to refuse). To the point that now the right is criticizing it for not going far enough.
I suppose this is for searching individuals for any reason? If it's anything like the American stop and frisk it's good they can refuse because the police might/will target minorities.
Well that part is specific to large public events. The four main points of the new law would be :
1. Instead of house arrests, prefects and ministers can force people to stay within a given area (at least city-sized). Ankle monitors can be used only with the approbation of the restricted person.
2. Home searches ("perquisitions administratives") will need to be authorized by prefects and judges.
3. Prefects will be allowed to close places of worship which spread pro-jihad messages.
4. For events like concerts, fooball matches, large meetings etc., the prefect can allow pat-downs and visual control of bags. Vehicles in the area can be asked to be searched, and if the owner refuses he'll have to leave the area.
http://www.rtl.fr/actu/politique/lo...es-quatre-mesures-phares-du-projet-7789046620
Feels very dirty, even if the cases are real.
Being a corrupt and/or law-breaking politician is dirty. Turning their dirtiness against them is fair play.
There is a foolproof technique not to get caught with your hand in the honey jar : not putting your hand in the honey jar.
lol bayrou
the communist party managed to get themselves a group with the help of four overseas MPs, you have to admire its resilience.
So they're not even going to share a group with FI? Talk about being dumb...
They're going to get wiped out the next election if the proportional system is not implemented by then.
anyone has experience passing concours de la fonction publique? I'd like to leave uni and would like to find a job as a librarian.
Isn't G.O.O. working in a library?
I'm a "contractuel" myself, not a fonctionnaire, which has drawbacks but more benefits as far as I'm concerned so I don't intend to become "titulaire" at this point and don't know much about external concours...
I reckon you've already looked into www.carrieres-publiques.com and infos.emploipublic.fr. I guess the first rather important choice would be to either go for the Fonction publique d'Etat or Territoriale.
You might also want to look into the concours to be conservateur if you have the drive and qualifications (have you got your "licence" or not yet?).