After 10 years without discussions between the two, the president and the Socialist mayor of Paris have had a better relationship since the 2024 Olympic Games.
French President Emmanuel Macron says the cauldron balloon, one of the Paris Olympics’ most admired attractions, would float in the skies over the French capital every summer until the 2028 Los Angele
Olympic balloon 'to return every summer' to Paris up to LA Games: Macron The flame-free Olympic balloon tethered to a cauldron that was an iconic symbol of last summer's Games in Paris is to return to the French capital every year up until the next edition in Los Angeles in 2028,
(Ludovic Marin, Pool via AP) French President Emmanuel Macron, and Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo, left, attend a commemoration marking 10 years since an Islamist attack on the Charlie Hebdo satirical ...
Olympic favourite to return to Paris skies every summer until 2028 Los Angeles Games - The cauldron balloon was one of the Paris Olympics’ most admired attractions
President Emmanuel Macron said on Friday that one of the most popular symbols of last summer's Olympics will be back until 2028.
France’s political dynamic, and the prospects for the Left within it, should be read within the broader trajectory of the country’s neoliberal paradigm. Now dominant for over four decades, this paradigm is built on pillars that structure the worldview of not only a large swath of France’s ruling elites (in the political,
French President Emmanuel Macron’s attempt to connect with young constituents on social media turned into une grosse erreur after he unknowingly helped a user who previously trolled both him and ...
PARIS (AP) — French President Emmanuel Macron announced Friday that the cauldron balloon, one of the Paris Olympics ' most admired attractions, would float in the skies over the French capital every summer until the 2028 Los Angeles Games.
French President Emmanuel Macron announced Friday that the cauldron balllon is set to return to the French capital every year until the 2028 Los Angeles Games. Macron said the balloon would return
To Mr Mélenchon’s consternation, 58 out of 66 Socialist deputies, including their leader, Olivier Faure, refused. They abstained after Mr Bayrou agreed to trim some proposed spending cuts in the budget and to reopen talks on the retirement age.
T HREE YEARS ago the French Socialist Party was crushed into irrelevance. The party that supplied two modern presidents—François Mitterrand (1981-95) and François Hollande (2012-17)—and nine prime ministers,