As a cabinet member, the attorney general should align with the president, experts say, while protecting the Justice Department from聽 interference. That balance may be tough to strike.
Embattled on many fronts, French President Emmanuel Macron has a suggestion for his compatriots: Let鈥檚 talk. So he鈥檚 kicking off the 鈥淭he Great National Debate.鈥
It鈥檚 an ambitious, two-month experiment in participatory democracy in which the French can air their deep frustrations over policy and propose solutions in town hall debates, online, or in entries in local 鈥済rievance books.鈥 Today, in a lengthy open letter, Mr. Macron encouraged comment on four topics: taxes, green energy, citizenship, and state bureaucracy. He also said the discussion will allow the building of a new 鈥渃ontract for the nation鈥 and 鈥渢ransform anger into solutions.鈥
That anger has been most visible in sustained and sometimes violent public protests that grew out of a now-withdrawn fuel tax. Macron鈥檚 initiative has plenty of critics, who argue its scope is unclear and note the red lines around certain topics. One read: 鈥淢acron hopes debate can quell French unrest. So did Louis XVI.鈥 A poll last week indicated 41 percent of citizens would participate, while 40 percent would not. But at the very least, Macron is making a high-stakes offer to listen. And, , head of the Elabe firm that conducted the poll, 鈥渙ne of the main lessons from the Yellow Vests [protesters] is that there鈥檚 a demand of the French public to have their opinions heard.鈥
Now to our five stories, on democracy in bumpy action, the changing expectations of young adults, and progress against suicide.