Emmanuel Macron called on Thursday, July 3, “every minister” to “take care of the business for which he is appointed” on Thursday, July 3, arguing “disciplining the speech” within a government where the differences extend regularly.
“If we begin to have ministers who take care of everything, it is no longer called a government,” he insisted on the head of state apart from a trip to Aveyron.
The departure of this president occurs after a pass of arms within the government’s coalition around renewable energies. In a column published in Le Figaro on Wednesday, the Minister of the Interior and president of the Republicans (LR) Bruno Retailleau and two party officials, have spoken for an absolute priority in nuclear and against public support for wind and photovoltaic, which according to them “bring (bouquet) French energy that an expensive intermida to administer.”
A forum criticized by Emmanuel Macron and several members of the government. “You have to do nuclear and renewable,” said the Head of State, asking not to “take care” and “get out of the whims.”
“There is only a government policy that defines”
After the rethinking of the Head of State, the Interior Minister said Thursday night “very curious to reproach the right position on the energy he has always had.”
“What we say is common sense: nuclear must continue to be the backbone of a decarbon, economical and pilable energy. We also say that if renewable energies are necessary as a complement, they have now reached maturity and there is no need to subsidize them,” he wrote in X.
Guest in BFMTV, Prime Minister François Bayrou called his right and central ministers to cultivate “the spirit of responsibility”, which “will allow them to express themselves with a little more nuances.”
“I wanted a heavyweight government (…) you don’t take it as a childhood class, you listen to what they say,” said the prime minister. “Then there were internal campaigns, political movements,” he continued, while several of his political partners have presidential ambitions.
“But there is only a government policy, (…) is what I naturally define, collegially” and “it is I who contrasts,” he said, denying any disaster, since the issue of renewable energies “is an arbitrated issue. There will be renewable.” “And then there is no space for games or for the traps with each other.”
Source: BFM TV
