#Mathilde Panot
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fidjiefidjie · 5 months ago
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😉 Humour du jour 🤣
Miss France 🇲🇫 2025 🥳
Source: Davynimal
👋 Bel après-midi
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transparentgentlemenmarker · 5 months ago
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Panot
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frenchgryffindor1960 · 6 months ago
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Mathilde Panot: *walks in faster than ever with a blank face* who broke my mug?
Louis Boyard: *whispering* she's gonna scream at me isn't she?
Antoine Léaument: *whispering* good luck dude, she's gonna kill you, when she's calm like that...
David Guiraud: Clémence did it
Louis Boyard: *whispering* what the fuck is he doing???
Antoine Léaument: *whispering* let him cook
Mathilde Panot: *smiling and blushing slightly* oh, well she's probably working right now, maybe I'll talk to her later *walks out*
Louis Boyard: what the fuck just happened
Antoine Léaument: don't ask questions, just remember if you have a problem, let David cook and run
David Guiraud: *smirks*
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male-spirit · 11 months ago
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Mathilde Panot entame une grève de la faim pour dénoncer la montée de l'extrême droite dans le pays.
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vincentreproches · 1 year ago
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L’innovant est dans le tout haut de l’affiche. Ce n’est pas commun de présenter son affiche de candidature en utilisant les canons de l’affiche de cinéma.
« L’union populaire presente… »
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chroniquesdiverses · 18 days ago
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Mathilde Panot et la sécheresse marine, une gaffe mémorable
Mathilde Panot est notre députée du Val-de-Marne et présidente du groupe LFI. Grâce à elle, “La Farce Insoumise” est toujours au rendez-vous. Toujours là pour pimenter “Le Futur Imprévisible”. En effet, dans son assemblée, on ne manque jamais d’idée, ni de “La Figure Improbable” ! Elle nous a encore offert un moment de grâce (ou de… disons… perplexité) très récemment. On est dorénavant passé au…
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sarahc351 · 10 months ago
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observatoiredumensonge · 1 year ago
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Panot recadrée par l’Union des démocrates musulmans de France : signal inquiétant pour LFI
c’est pourtant elle qui a accouché de l’islamo-wokisme Par Gabrielle Cluzel Vous pouvez soutenir notre juste combat en vous abonnant à Semaine du MENSONGE, pour 15€ un an, (au lieu de 18), paiement sécurisé, envoi chaque lundi, cliquez sur l’image ci-dessous En cadeau, un livre en PDF !!! [EDITO] Panot recadrée par l’Union des démocrates musulmans de France : signal inquiétant pour…
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lejournaldupeintre · 1 year ago
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LFI’s Mathilde Panot summoned by police over alleged ‘apology of terrorism’
The head of  La France Insoumise Mathilde Panot, one of the leaders of La France Insoumise Party (LFI), was summoned by the police as part of an investigation into allegations of “apology of terrorism” Mathilde Panot, one of the leaders of La France Insoumise Party (LFI), was summoned by the police for allegedly engaging in “apology of terrorism”. The move on April 23 forms part of an ongoing…
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a-room-of-my-own · 1 year ago
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De mieux en mieux La Résistance!
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fidjiefidjie · 1 month ago
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😆 Humour du jour 🤣
L'amour 🫂 , pas la guerre ! 💔
Source: Davynimal
👋 Bel après-midi
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transparentgentlemenmarker · 5 months ago
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Panot
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verypersonalscreencaps · 1 year ago
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"PREGNANT, IF I WANT, WHEN I WANT, HOW I WANT" FRANCE BECOMES FIRST COUNTRY TO EXPLICITLY ENSHRINE ABORTION RIGHTS IN CONSTITUTION The Washington Post | Published March 4, 2024 PARIS — With the endorsement of a specially convened session of lawmakers at Versailles, France on Monday became the first country in the world to explicitly enshrine abortion rights in its constitution — an effort galvanized by the rollback of protections in the United States. The amendment referring to abortion as a “guaranteed freedom” needed the approval of three-fifths of lawmakers — or 512 votes. The vote result on Monday evening was 780 in favor and 72 against. “We’re sending a message to all women: your body belongs to you and no one can decide for you,” Prime Minister Gabriel Attal told lawmakers assembled in Versailles. Thousands of Parisians gathered to watch the proceedings live on a giant television screen at Le Parvis des Droits de l’Homme — or “Human Rights Square” — in central Paris, with the Eiffel Tower looming dramatically over the scene. Before the political debate began, the television screen showed a montage of women’s rights campaigners around the world holding signs declaring, “My body is mine” and “My body, my choice.” The sound system blared Aretha Franklin’s “Respect.” Parisians driving by honked their horns. France decriminalized abortion in 1975; abortion is legal for any reason through the 14th week of pregnancy. This amendment won’t change any of that. But while other countries have inferred abortion rights protections from their constitutions, as the U.S. Supreme Court did in Roe v. Wade, France is the first to explicitly codify in its constitution that abortion rights are protected. France is not interpreting its constitution; it is changing its constitution. The outcome was “also a promise for all women who fight all over the world for the right to have autonomy over their bodies — in Argentina, in the United States, in Andorra, in Italy, in Hungary, in Poland,” said lawmaker Mathilde Panot, who had introduced the bill in the National Assembly. “This vote today tells them: your struggle is ours, this victory is yours.” People gather near the Eiffel Tower during the broadcast of the special session of Parliament, in Paris on Monday.
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jartita-me-teneis · 6 months ago
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@Caterin49788702
Mathilde Panot, diputada de la Asamblea de Francia, denuncia la llegada del ministro israelí Smotritch a Francia, y da un discurso que deberían decir todos los políticos del mundo si es que aún les queda un gramo de decencia.
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soldan56 · 11 months ago
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Ciò che è in gioco in queste elezioni è l’identità politica del popolo francese. Questa identità non è una lingua, né una religione, né il colore della pelle. La Francia è un popolo politico, unito attorno a un motto: Libertà, Uguaglianza, Fraternità.
Mathilde Panot #NouveauFrontPopulaire
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justforbooks · 5 months ago
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The tragedy of Michel Barnier
Prime Minister Michel Barnier will leave office having served the shortest prime ministerial term in modern French history.
The collapse of France’s government on Wednesday night means it now finally falls to President Emmanuel Macron to step up and confront a snowballing political and economic crisis that risks sending shock waves across the eurozone.
After a heated debate in the National Assembly — marked by raucous jeers and boos — 331 of France’s 577 lawmakers voted to oust Prime Minister Michel Barnier in a vote of no confidence after he tried to force through an austere budget to fix the country’s yawning deficits.   
Once he formally resigns, Barnier will become the shortest-lived prime minister in the history of the modern French republic and the first to be booted out by parliament since 1962.
The political chaos led a growing number of lawmakers to demand the resignation of Macron, whose term lasts until 2027. That would be an almost-unprecedented move in modern French politics. Macron’s office said the president will address the political impasse in a speech on Thursday at 8 p.m.   Speaking before the vote, far-right leader Marine Le Pen said Macron would “sacrifice the fate of France because of his vanity” if he failed to step aside.  
“Emmanuel Macron has attacked the foundation walls of the nation for the past seven years,” Le Pen said, earning a round of applause from her troops as they tried to drown out the boos from Barnier’s allies. “He alone can pull the country out of the rut it’s in [with his resignation].” 
Mathilde Panot of the hard-left France Unbowed party said Wednesday’s vote was a defeat for “all of Emmanuel Macron’s policies.”  
“To break the deadlock, we ask for Emmanuel Macron to go,” she said to reporters after the vote. 
As the crisis — largely triggered by Macron’s knee-jerk call for a snap election this summer — mounted to fever pitch, the president stayed on the sidelines.
He arrived back at the Élysée palace from Saudi Arabia only just before his government collapsed and will now need to take the helm himself, not least by proposing a new prime minister who can right the ship and prove that the EU’s second-largest economy has not become ungovernable.
Barnier himself accused the lawmakers of acting irresponsibility by bringing down his government.  
“I cannot accept the idea that institutional destabilization could be the objective that brings together a majority of lawmakers at a moment when our country faces a deep moral, economic, financial and civic crisis,” he said before the vote.  
There’s nothing, however, to suggest it would be easier to form a government capable of winning the endorsement of a parliament split three ways than it was three months ago. Dissolution is also not an option, as Macron can’t call new elections until summer 2025. 
“This [National] Assembly is impossible,” Barnier told his ministers gathered in the Matignon palace after the vote, according to a participant there who spoke on the condition of anonymity in line with French protocol. “I sincerely wish the next team the best of luck.” 
In the immediate term, France must prepare for uncharted territory.  
The country will almost certainly enter the new year without a budget, and while Barnier could be asked to stay on as a caretaker and put forward emergency laws, such measures would do nothing to bring down a deficit — currently projected at 6.1 percent of gross domestic product — that has frightened financial markets and drawn rebuke from Brussels.
Investors deemed France as risky an investment as Greece after weeks of concern that the political crisis could evolve into a financial one if lawmakers could not agree to Barnier’s prescription of a bitter potion of fiscal prudence and old-fashioned austerity measures.  
The political upheaval could hardly come at a worse time for Europe, which is in dire need of leadership to confront challenges ranging from the return of Donald Trump to the conflict in Ukraine and a potential trade war with China. Germany, the other half of the engine that powers the continent, is ill-equipped to take the reins while struggling with its own political mess and a sputtering economy.
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