Martine Vassal adopta el lema 'trabajo, familia, patria' en debate de Marsella

Durante un debate televisado sobre las elecciones municipales de Marsella, la candidata de derechas Martine Vassal adoptó y defendió el lema 'trabajo, familia, patria', vinculado al régimen de Vichy, antes de añadir 'humanidad'. El momento detuvo las discusiones entre los principales candidatos, centradas en controversias nacionales.

El debate, presentado por BFM-TV en colaboración con La Provence y Le Figaro, tuvo lugar el jueves 19 de febrero en el gran salón del Palais de la Bourse, cerca del Vieux-Port de Marsella. Los cuatro principales candidatos – Benoît Payan (divers gauche, alcalde en ejercicio), Martine Vassal (divers droite), Sébastien Delogu (La France insoumise) y Franck Allisio (Rassemblement national) – llevaban más de una hora discutiendo temas nacionales, incluyendo la muerte de Quentin Deranque en Lyon, presuntos lazos entre el grupo antifascista La Jeune Garde y LFI, y la lucha contra el narcotráfico.  nnInterrogada sobre una posible alianza en segunda vuelta con el RN, Martine Vassal, presidenta de la Metrópolis Aix-Marseille-Provence y del departamento de Bouches-du-Rhône, y respaldada por una unión de centro-derecha que incluye a Renaissance, afirmó que sus valores personales «nunca han cambiado»: «Es mérito, trabajo, familia, patria.»  nnLa declaración provocó una respuesta inmediata. Benoît Payan intervino: «¿Te das cuenta de lo que acabas de decir? Trabajo, familia, patria – ese es el lema del señor Pétain.» Martine Vassal respondió desafiantemente: «Sí, por supuesto. ¡Y es mi lema y mis valores!» Instada por la periodista Apolline de Malherbe, añadió: «Y humanidad.»  nnEl momento paralizó a la audiencia, destacando un cambio en un debate que de otro modo se centraba en cuestiones alejadas de las preocupaciones diarias de los marselleses.

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