After 46 days since the second round of the legislative elections in France, France still does not have a government. To justify this long time before acting, the President of the Republic Emmanuel Macron brandished the argument of the Olympic Games, as if there was an Olympic truce that required him not to name a new team. Is this technically, legally and constitutionally normal? Arnaud le Pillouer, professor of public law at the University of Paris-Nanterre, specialist in constitutional law, deciphers the French political situation on RFI.
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