Left-wing candidate Lucie Castets’ strange campaign for France’s premiership
Over the two weeks since her name burst onto the French political scene, the Nouveau Front Populaire’s candidate for prime minister has been thrust into the limelight and is trying to forge a reputation for herself.
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If everything had gone ahead as planned, she’d currently be visiting the Leaning Tower of Pisa in the Tuscan heat, sipping a chilled spritz. Instead, Lucie Castets canceled everything to accept a rather unusual summer job: Forcing Emmanuel Macron to appoint her as France’s prime minister, even though, two weeks ago, he didn’t even know she existed. It’s a rather complex story, but all those who have met Castets since Tuesday, July 23, the date when she burst onto the French political scene, seem to have no worries whatsoever: The 37-year-old senior civil servant has all the necessary aplomb, according to them, as she now faces her first major challenge.
On Wednesday, July 31, the satirical newspaper Le Canard Enchaîné revealed that the left-wing Nouveau Front Populaire (NFP) alliance’s candidate for prime minister, had taken paid leave to begin her “campaign,” instead of taking an unpaid leave of absence. As a result, right-wing Parisian politicians alerted the public prosecutor for her “violation of her duty of confidentiality.” She brushed aside the controversy: “I’m very relaxed. There’s no legal problem,” she told Le Monde on Friday, August 2. She had more pressing matters on her plate. She was soon to meet, via videoconference, with the heads of the four NFP parties: Marine Tondelier for the Greens, Fabien Roussel for the Parti Communiste Français (PCF), Olivier Faure for the Parti Socialiste (PS) and Manuel Bompard for La France Insoumise (LFI, radical left). It’s all about the scale of the challenge – “on the day you’re [appointed], you have to be ready” – and these meetings, which always start the same way: “I tell them what I intend to do.”