Current Affairs

Even if France’s budget doesn’t tackle the public deficit, let’s give thanks it exists | Agnès Poirier

Hurda! Or rather, Hala! On Monday, the French government, led by Francois Bayro, did not drop our fourth prime minister per year. Our expectations have been very low since the amazing elections in July 2024 came out of our policy that we are grateful when disasters are not achieved. When the Michelle Barnier government fell before Christmas, it was in power for only three months and was unable to pass any kind of legislation. This was the first time since 1962, as a government was prolonged after a vote of lack of confidence.

The current government did not fall again last week thanks to the Socialists, who appeared to be “deciphering” recently from the far left of Jean Luke Milinkon. Socialists are now the royal makers and enjoy the lights. Let’s hope that they will continue to think about their head and not to tempt the revolutionary, non -feasible impulses. France It needs a little pragmatism, for change. Payro, a medium and smooth operator, achieved one thing: France now has a budget. Even if this budget does not deal with the huge general deficit (6 % of GDP), it is at least. Now we can all return to our favorite hobby: feeling fun.

A role model

La Chambre Bleue (1923) by Susan Valdon. The first retroactive effect of the artist can be seen 60 years ago at the Bombido Center in Paris. Photo: Photo Heritage/Getty Images

A French Traffic Anniaration can be found at the Pompidou Center, which has been shown retrospectively for nearly 60 years of great painter. Suzan Valdon. What a suitable greeting to such a strong and unconfirmed artist before the museum closes its doors over the next five years (those large colored tubes need comprehensive reform).

Valdon, the daughter of my mother’s laundry in Monmarter, similar to Renoir, Bouvis de Shavan and Toulouse Lotrrick, before the drawing was independent. She learned her craft from her observation at work and was constantly drawn and drawn from the age of nine. The POMPIDOU Center is exposed to more than 200 of its work in which no person-especially not itself, is not itself, in the formulation of self-whose slow addiction to alcohol. Power by Edgar Digas, Valdon style exceeds all technical movements on time. In the end, the blogs are the hands, the woman. In his compassionate messages, Diga described her as “terrible Maria” (her real first name). On January 8, 1896, he wrote: “I love seeing this big and wonderful brush for you. A happy new year.”

No Bill Mrs.

The Notre Dame Cathedral was reopened to the public in December 2024, five years after it was destroyed by a fire. Photo: Andrea Renault/Zuma Press Wire/Rex/Shutterstock

From the POMPIDOU Center, you can hear the notes of the Notre Dame Cathedral now ringing several times a day. What a happy soundtrack for our lives after five years of silence in the heart of Paris. Long waiting lists on PARVIS on the front, and last week the Tourism Office in Paris revealed that the cathedral had already welcomed 800,000 visitors in the first month of reopening, at a rate of 30,000 a day.

A third has been booked; Others chose the waiting list, sometimes for hours, to enter. The average time they spend indoors, and they are surprised by the restoration of craftsmen, 32 minutes.

Putting the promotion of the previous newsletter

Beyond statistics and numbers, here is an unusual achievement of craftsmanship, which is the president Emmanuel Macron Last week, he promised to deliver again by granting overcrowded mobile museums a second entrance by 2030. An international architectural competition will be launched and will be sentenced before the end of the year. Good luck for architects who will try to reach the genius of the IM Pei glass pyramid, in front of the largest and most popular museum in the world.

Agnès Poirier is a political commentator, writer and critic of the British, American and European press

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