Yannick Jadot
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Age | 57 |
Web site | www.yannickjadot.fr |
Date of birth | July 27,1967 |
Zodiac sign | Leo |
Born | Clacy-et-Thierret |
France | |
Party | Europe Ecology – The Greens |
Office | Member of the European Parliament |
Job | Environmentalist |
Current partner | Isabelle Saporta |
Position | Member of the European Parliament |
Member of the European Parliament since 2019 | |
Education | Paris Dauphine University |
Previous position | Member of the European Parliament (2009–2019) |
Siblings | Thierry Jadot |
Movies/Shows | La France face à la guerre |
Nationality | French |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 475548 |
Yannick Jadot Life story
Yannick Jadot is a French environmentalist and politician who has served as a Member of the European Parliament since the 2009 European election, representing the West France constituency.
French elections: Macron v Le Pen and two visions for France
... Emmanuel Macron has already secured the backing of the one Green presidential candidate, Yannick Jadot...
France election: This time it won't be a walkover for Macron
... On the left, voters decided that neither the Socialist Anne Hidalgo nor the Green Yannick Jadot could ever make it into round two...
French election: Macron faces stiffest test as France votes
... Tactical voting may also play a part, if voters decide to back one of the favourites because they have more of a chance of winning than, for example, Greens candidate Yannick Jadot...
French election: A really simple guide
... Jean-Luc Mélenchon is from the far-left party France Unbowed, and Yannick Jadot is standing for the Greens...
French election: Who's vying to challenge Emmanuel Macron?
... Other candidates in race on the leftYannick Jadot - Europe Écologie Les Verts (Europe Ecology - The Greens)A former Greenpeace militant and an MEP since 2009, Yannick Jadot was picked by the Greens via an online primary...
French elections: Divided left fight doomed race of their own
... With 11 weeks to go until Round One, the Socialists and the Greens are at daggers drawn over which of their respective candidates, Anne Hidalgo and Yannick Jadot, is the true champion of the mainstream left...
French elections: Divided left fight doomed race of their own
Pity the French left-winger as he or she contemplates the upcoming presidential elections.
For the First Time in living memory, there is not a single candidate from their camp among the front-runners ahead of the April vote.
The highest-ranking leftist, Jean-Luc Mélenchon, is in fifth place at about 9% in the polls, outperformed by a centrist President Emmanuel Macron , a conservative in Valérie Pécresse and two far-right wingers in Marine Le Pen and Eric Zemmour .
Daggers drawnAs things stand, the chances of a left-wing candidate Making It through to The Second round - let alone winning the election like François Hollande in 2012 and François Mitterrand years before - look like a Pipe Dream .
What's more, despite the voters' anguished pleas for unity, The Party machines have merely responded with yet more division.
With 11 weeks to go until Round One , the Socialists and The Greens are at daggers drawn over which of their respective candidates, Anne Hidalgo and Yannick Jadot , is the true champion of the mainstream left.
From his more radical perspective, and from The Advantage of a higher poll score, Jean-Luc Mélenchon looks on both with ill-disguised disdain.
Then there is The Communist , Fabien Roussel , determined to keep his party's identity alive. And he's not doing badly, given that at 3% he is equal with Ms Hidalgo. Add to that anti-capitalists Nathalie Arthaud and Philippe Poutou , fighting their own battle on The Fringe .
Seven in race for The LeftOne left-wing candidate, ex-minister Arnaud Montebourg , has decided to call it A Day , arguing that to continue in The Race with such a multitude of candidates would be to " add disorder to confusion".
But that was More Than offset by the declaration of another former minister, Christiane Taubira . So There are still seven left-wingers in the running.
Moreover her late entry into The Race merely sowed more ill-feeling where there was already plenty to go round.
Hailed by many, especially the young, as an inspirational figure because of her battles against racism and for gay marriage, Ms Taubira was hoping to play a " Deus Ex machina" kind of role, uniting the discordant tribes behind her.
French elections 2022April 10 Round One : If one candidate wins 50% of vote they win outright
April 24 Round Two: The two front-runners go into a run-off to decide The Presidency
Working in Christiane Taubira 's favour has been a grassroots project called the " Popular Primary" in which at The End of next week left-wing supporters who register on a website will get to choose which candidate best expresses their vision and should therefore represent The Left in April.
With enough participation in the so-called primary, The Argument goes, whoever emerges as The Most popular leader on The Left will have the moral authority to demand that The Others all stand aside, which they will of course do in the interests of the greater good.
It may sound plausible. In reality The Project is doomed.
'Too many heads'Mr Mélenchon and Yannick Jadot have both said they want nothing to do with The Business , believing it was conceived by supporters of Christiane Taubira to boost her entry into The Race .
Anne Hidalgo feels the same, but her position is complicated because some in her Socialist Party may actually be rooting for Ms Taubira because they think Ms Hidalgo has made such a lousy campaign of it So Far .
Add to the picture that in this popular primary there are also three other potential candidates - the totally unknown Anna Agueb-Porterie, Charlotte Marchandise and Pierre Larroutourou - and you can see why the average left-wing voter might be tempted to start tugging the rug.
" There are simply too many heads on too small a stage, " as Libération newspaper, house journal of the French left, put it This Week . " True, no-one really believed in a Grand Union of The Left . But who would have thought the fingers on one hand would be insufficient to count the candidates? "
Of course in the French system having a multiplicity of candidates on The Left or right is not necessarily a handicap.
That's as long as there is a clear front-runner who, having qualified for the run-off, can count on The First -round votes of their erstwhile rivals, who would now be ministerial hopefuls.
What went wrong for French leftWhen Mitterrand won The Presidency in 1981, he was up against five left-wing and environmentalist candidates in Round One . However, his first-round vote was 25% and his nearest rival was The Communist , Georges Marchais , on 9%, the same as the highest-ranking leftist Jean-Luc Mélenchon is polling today.
In late-night sessions In Paris salons the arguments Roll On about why things have come to this pass:
Or is it simply that Emmanuel Macron craftily mastered this All Along , splitting The Left apart in 2017? The One thing it has not spent The Last five years doing is getting Back Together .
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