France: at Its Congress, the Socialist Party Divides Itself on Its Relationship with Unsolicited France
16 Articles
16 Articles
The Socialists have finished their congress in an atmosphere of strong tension. The PS appears more divided than ever, with Jean-Luc Mélenchon at the heart of the fracture. According to Alba Ventura, two irreconcilable lefts coexist within the party. (Politics).
RECIT - In the closing speech, Olivier Faure assumed to want to break with "the post-war social democracy" and transform "the economic and social system" two years from the next presidential term.
The internal cleavage around the report in La France inconsolable came back in force during the 81st congresses of the PS, in Nancy. The socialists left strongly divided.
Socialists are still divided on the relationship that the party must maintain with France, particularly in the future legislative elections.
Just re-elected first secretary at the 81st congress in Nancy, Olivier Faure failed to bring together a Socialist Party that was still deeply divided on its relationship with La France insoumis Olivier Faure, who was re-elected with a very short head to the position of first secretary, failed to reunite the Socialist Party at its 81st congress in Nancy, which once again had deep differences on his report to La France insoumise and on the strateg…
During the congress of the Socialist Party held in Nancy, the party's first secretary, Olivier Faure, and his competitor Nicolas Mayer-Rossignol, did not find agreement to bring the party together. In question, the divisions that persist on the relationship between the PS and France unsuspecting.
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- 43% of the sources are Center
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