Gabriel Attal
Gabriel Attal is a French Politician
of the Renaissance (RE) party who has been serving as Prime Minister of France
since January 9, 2024. After his election to the French National Assembly in
June 2017, Attal quickly rose through the political ranks, becoming a junior
minister to the minister of national education and youth in 2018, Government
Spokesperson in 2020, minister of public action and accounts in 2022 and
minister of national education and youth in 2023. On 9 January 2024, Attal was
appointed by French President Emmanuel Macron to replace Élisabeth Borne as
prime minister. At the age of 34, he became the youngest and first openly gay
person to hold the office in France, and the youngest serving state leader in
the world. A political ally of Macron, he has been described as a potential
contender for the 2027 French presidential election.
Early life and education Attal
was born on 16 March 1989 in Clamart, Île-de-France. He grew up in the 13th and
14th arrondissements (districts) of Paris with three sisters. His father, Yves
Attal, was a lawyer and film producer of half Tunisian Jewish descent (on the
paternal side) and half Alsatian Jewish descent (on the maternal side). Attal's
mother, Marie de Couriss, was of French and Greek-Russian ancestry, and worked
as an employee of a film production company. Attal was raised in his mother's
religion of Orthodox Christianity. Attal attended École alsacienne, a private
school in the 6th arrondissement. He then studied law at Panthéon-Assas
University from 2008 to 2011, and then at Sciences Po in 2012, where he
received a Master of Public Affairs. He also spent a year (2009–2010) working
with Éric de Chassey, director of the French Academy at Rome. His political
activity first began when he participated in the 2006 youth protests in
France.[5] Taking up a place at Sciences Po in 2007, he created a committee for
the support of Íngrid Betancourt, the Franco-Colombian hostage held by the
FARC.
Political career
National advisory and municipal After an internship at the French National Assembly with Marisol Touraine during the 2012 presidential campaign, Attal worked for five years as an advisor to the Minister of Health, a role which involved parliamentary liaison and speechwriting. In the 2014 municipal elections, Attal was placed fifth on the Socialist Party list. He was elected as one of the four Socialist Party councilors of Vanves and took over the lead of the opposition, after the resignation of the head of the socialist list.
Member of the National
Assembly (2017–2018) Attal was elected to the French National Assembly on
18 June 2018, representing the Hauts-de-Seine's 10th constituency, winning out
over the designated successor of André Santini. Attal was quickly
considered one of the most talented new members of parliament, with Amélie de
Montchalin. As a deputy of the National Assembly he became a member of the
Committee on Cultural and Education Affairs, where he served as whip of the
group La République En Marche!. In December 2017, Attal was appointed
rapporteur on a bill on access to higher education. Attal was named
chairperson of La République En Marche! in January 2018 and in September 2018,
after the election of Richard Ferrand to the presidency of the National
Assembly, he ran as a candidate to succeed him as president of the group La
Républiqe En Marche!, but withdrew his candidacy the day before the election
when he was considered one of the three favourites. He later endorsed Roland
Lescure.
Member of the Government
(2018–2024) On 16 October 2018, Attal was appointed Secrétaire d'État
(junior minister) to the Minister of National Education and Youth Jean-Michel
Blanquer. At 29, he was the youngest member of a government under the Fifth
Republic, beating the previous record set by François Baroin in 1995 by a few
months. He was responsible for youth issues and setting up universal national
service. Attal was the government spokesperson under Prime Minister Jean Castex
from 2020 to 2022. He became Minister of Public Action and Accounts in the
government of Prime Minister Élisabeth Borne in May 2022. In July 2023,
Attal was appointed minister of national education and youth in the 2023 French
government reshuffle. At the age of 34, he became the youngest person to hold
that office under the Fifth Republic. In this position, he announced the ban on
abayas under the "principle of secularism", extening a ban on
religious symbols in French public schools that already included Christian
crosses, Jewish Kippahs and Islamic veils.
Prime Minister Following
Borne's resignation as Prime Minister on 8 January 2024, media sources
announced Attal as favourite to succeed her. His appointment as Prime Minister
was announced on 9 January 2024. At the age of 34, he became the youngest and
first openly gay person to hold the office in France. There has been
speculation in the French media that Attal could be a contender in the 2027
presidential election.
Personal Life Attal
previously lived in a civil union with Stéphane Séjourné, a member of the
European Parliament for LREM. The relationship had ended by 2024. When they
were both attending the École alsacienne, he had a relationship with singer
Joyce Jonathan, but Jonathan said that the relationship was merely "a joke
between us" and "a playtime crush". Attal said in a TV
interview that he had been subjected to homophobic bullying at school. In 2018,
he was outed on Twitter by his former classmate Juan Branco. He has also
described being the target of homophobic and antisemitic hate speech on social
media as a politician.
^ Not only is Gabriel Attal
France's First Gay Prime Minister, but he is also Jewish (but not its First
Jewish Prime Minister.)
France’s First Jewish Prime
Minister was Leon Blum who was Prime Minister from 1936-1938 and 1946-1947. He
was imprisoned by the Germans during World War 2 at the Buchenwald and Dachau
Concentration Camps.
At a time when Anti-Jewish
Violence in France (the, US, Spain, Poland, Russia, the UK, Canada, etc.) rises
to unheard of percentages its good to see things like this. ^
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