The President of the PoitouCharentes region found that France is wrong hands

It is in a small park tack in a football stadium, located under a highway onramp, that took place Saturday at Arcueil third day of the brotherhood of desires for the future, the movement of Ségolène Royal. Many tenors of the PS, as Claude Bartolone and Manuel Valls, came to discussions and left before the speech by Ségolène Royal, and Jean-Luc Mélenchon, ex-PS, leader of the left party, present for "Ségolène Royal to defend the idea of a referendum on pensions." Late in the afternoon, while 2,000 to 3,500 people (according to the organizers) have resumed in chorus refrain of a song by Yannick Noah which words, "give me a life, a hope, a desire", called naturally Ségolène Royal (marine blue tailleur-pantalon, white shirt, pink scarf) to climb on stage.

The President of the Poitou-Charentes region found that "France is wrong hands". True to his usual, she has distilled a few small sentences providing a great success: "the head of State promised to advance the France at the speed of the TGV and can be found on the"Titanic"! Elle has expressed his anger chanting repeatedly: "That do up there", "Nothing!" replied the public in chorus. While she began his speech by saying that "the antisarkozysme is not sufficient" and adding that, "today, the French want proposals and I will come", it has hardly shown very precise on this point, if it is recalling the exemplarity of his action in the Poitou-Charentes region, which could (and should) be extended to the whole nation. Later, the first in the presidential election has opted for a more poetic register, wanting to "extinguish the fire of despair simmering under the ashes of the lost illusions". Found a more moralistic tone, it addressed then young, recalling that there is no "rights without duties" and that "it has nothing without effort".

Repeating a passage of his speech at the summer University for the Socialists in La Rochelle, it reiterated that "the left has contracted a debt towards the French". Even if the public regularly launched "Ségolène, President!", she took care to mention, 2012, at least in the case. As if she knew that the path that could lead to the presidential had never been as steep.

Later in the polls

Even if the atmosphere was quite logically festive, even if his relatives (Guillaume Garot, Jean-Louis Bianco, Najat Belkacem, Delphine Batho and Dominique Bertinotti) were at his side and, finally, even if Pierre Bergé and counsel Jean-Pierre Mignard, who took their distance from it, were also there, Ségolène Royal has appeared much less forceful than when his recent television on the plateau of "has you try". "It remains far in the presidential polls it appears not only behind Martine Aubry and Dominique Strauss-Kahn, but also François Hollande," explains Jérôme Fourquet FIFG. Gaël Sliman of the BVA Institute, it is probably too far back to 2012, but "who knows, if Martine Aubry stumbling and if DSK is not, it will then have a card to play". "It already, initially reclaiming the outsider place now occupied by François Hollande," said.

The requirement of unity of socialist activists is such that, according to these analysts, Ségolène Royal, so singular, can only go back if it enters the ranks. As she well understood, reminding his followers the magic formula of Socialists: "United we are United we remain."