COUNTERPOINT – The double presidential finalist could well be the first political beneficiary of the refusal of retirement at 64 years old.
Left for three days in Senegal – she pleads in L’Opinion for an African country to sit on the UN Security Council -, Marine Le Pen won’t be on the streets on Thursday for protest against pension reform. She would not have been welcome there anyway, the union leaders having made the fight against the RN one of their priorities. However, although rejected by these actors of the protest, it could be that the double presidential finalist is the first political beneficiary of the refusal of retirement at 64 years old.
Its base is both the most numerous and the most coherent against the Borne reform. 86% of its voters in the first round are hostile to the reform as a whole. It is as much as among the voters of Jean-Luc Mélenchon. And as Le Pen obtained 23.15% on April 10, against 21.95% for the Insoumis, it is with her that we immediately find the most opponents of government copying.
This homogeneity of his camp results in part from the…