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« Il entend, mais il n'écoute personne » : le blues des conseillers de Macron -- Sott.net
in the corridors of the Elysée floats a painful wave in the soul, a little tune of "all this for that". It is time for the first departures in the presidential cabinet, which sees some figures of this unusual ecosystem making their mark. Between the endless Benalla affair, the unsolved polls, the communication failures and the feeling that the "master of clocks" no longer has control over his agenda, some high-ranking advisors wonder whether the sacrifices made in this supposedly expanding job were well worth it.
Others resent him for not following their advice more. "He hears, but he doesn't listen to anyone," says an old friend. The intense fatigue does not help the bruises on the soul and the almost generalized burn-out. Some advisors have been with the President since Bercy, more than four years, almost a five-year term. Like his predecessors before him, Emmanuel Macron has reached this stage of his term of office where he must renew his close team to replace tired soldiers with fresh troops.
Pillars on the way out
It is a classic: two years after his election, François Hollande had already replaced half of his cabinet. But a challenge for Macron, a very emotional one, who established a powerful relationship with the handful of advisors who brought him to power, nicknamed "the Mormons". A short while ago, one of them, the political adviser, Stéphane Séjourné, announced his imminent departure to lead the European campaign. On Wednesday, it was the Director of Communications, Sylvain Fort, who announced his resignation by the end of the month, as reported in our newspaper. Who will replace them?
in the corridors of the Elysée floats a painful wave in the soul, a little tune of "all this for that". It is time for the first departures in the presidential cabinet, which sees some figures of this unusual ecosystem making their mark. Between the endless Benalla affair, the unsolved polls, the communication failures and the feeling that the "master of clocks" no longer has control over his agenda, some high-ranking advisors wonder whether the sacrifices made in this supposedly expanding job were well worth it.
Others resent him for not following their advice more. "He hears, but he doesn't listen to anyone," says an old friend. The intense fatigue does not help the bruises on the soul and the almost generalized burn-out. Some advisors have been with the President since Bercy, more than four years, almost a five-year term. Like his predecessors before him, Emmanuel Macron has reached this stage of his term of office where he must renew his close team to replace tired soldiers with fresh troops.
Pillars on the way out
It is a classic: two years after his election, François Hollande had already replaced half of his cabinet. But a challenge for Macron, a very emotional one, who established a powerful relationship with the handful of advisors who brought him to power, nicknamed "the Mormons". A short while ago, one of them, the political adviser, Stéphane Séjourné, announced his imminent departure to lead the European campaign. On Wednesday, it was the Director of Communications, Sylvain Fort, who announced his resignation by the end of the month, as reported in our newspaper. Who will replace them?