Home FEATURED Gabriel Attal, 34, becomes France’s first openly gay Prime Minister

Gabriel Attal, 34, becomes France’s first openly gay Prime Minister

by EUToday Correspondents
Gabriel Attal

Gabriel Attal has, as widely predicted, been named France’s next prime minister, as Emmanuel Macron seeks to breathe new life into his presidency with a new government.

At 34, he is the youngest Prime Minister in modern French history, that title previously belonging to Socialist Laurent Fabius who was 37 when he was appointed by François Mitterrand in 1984.

Gabriel Attal replaces Élisabeth Borne, who resigned after less than 2 years in office.

Throughout that time she struggled with a lack of a majority in parliament.

Monsieur Attal, who is currently education minister, where he took the controversial decision to ban abayas, the long robes sometimes worn by Muslim women, in schools.

In this role he worked closely with Emmanuel Macron’s wife Brigitte, a former teacher with a keen eye on the sector. The pair worked mostly on eradicating bullying in schools

He will now have the task of leading the French government into important European Parliament elections in June.

His rise has been rapid. Ten years ago he was an obscure adviser in the health ministry, and a card-carrying member of the Socialists.

He will also be the first openly gay occupant of Hôtel Matignon.

He has been in a civil partnership with another Macron protege and former advisor, the MEP Stéphane Sejourné.

Following Macron’s 2017 election, Mr Attal became a member of parliament, and it was there that his brilliance as a debater brought him to the president’s attention.

At 29, Gabriel Attal became the youngest ever minister in the Fifth Republic with a junior post at education; from 2020 he was government spokesman and his face began to register with the voters.
Following President Macron’s re-election, he was briefly budget minister and then took over at education last July.
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Main image:Image: Par Selbymay — Travail personnel, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=76340728
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Élisabeth Borne
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Read also: French PM Élisabeth Borne resigns after 2 years in office

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