At the Fête de l'Humanité, the left-wing parties explain themselves, the people call for unity

This Saturday, September 13, the main left-wing parties met to debate this explosive political return, against a backdrop of social and democratic crisis, before an audience which, beyond their differences, called on them to unite.
They were expected to deliver. A year after being acclaimed at the Fête de l'Humanité for having successfully built a New Popular Front that has since disintegrated, the main left-wing parties debated, as usual, from the Agora. How to oppose Emmanuel Macron and his new Prime Minister, Sébastien Lecornu? What strategy should be adopted in the midst of an explosive political season? How should the next elections be prepared for, or even provoked?
In front of a large audience, five people gathered : Marine Tondelier, national secretary of the Ecologists, Olivier Faure, first secretary of the Socialist Party, Stéphane Peu, leader of the PCF deputies, François Ruffin, deputy and president of Debout!, and Hadrien Clouet, vice-president of the LFI group in the Assembly.
Following the fall of François Bayrou, Emmanuel Macron appointed Sébastien Lecornu to Prime Minister Matignon. What should the left's response be in the face of this denial of democracy and as social anger becomes increasingly vocal?
There's a "enough is enough" that's sweeping through the country. A "enough is enough" of seeing that work is taxed more than capital. That the local grocer pays more taxes than Amazon or the billionaire. Enough is enough! There's also a disgust that's set in for this political life that, for a year, has been talking about resignation, dismissal, dissolution, talking about who will go to Matignon or not, with a left that doesn't raise hope because it's locked in chapels and quarrels. Reopening a horizon must be our big deal. ...
L'Humanité