The Head of State plans on a whole series of projects for the coming year, consulting at all costs on subjects as varied as the reform of institutions. On Monday, March 13, the president scheduled two working meetings with local authorities by the summer, as part of his institutional reform project. The Head of State has “tightened the work schedule by setting [these meetings] with eight associations of elected officials”, the President of Regions of France told the press. Carole Delga, who came out of a meeting of the main associations of elected officials with Mr. Macron, added that Gérard Larcher and Yaël Braun-Pivet will also participate. “The president considered three themes as priorities: the education-training pole, the housing pole and the transport pole,” she said.

According to the participants consulted, the meeting did not address the controversial issue of the redistricting of the major regions, born of the 2015 reform. The secretary general of the presidential party, Renaissance, Stéphane Séjourné, had hoped in January that they find a ” human size “.

“Decentralization of Housing and Housing Policy”

At the Elysée, the president of the Assembly of the departments of France (AdF), François Sauvadet, reiterated that he “did not expect a territorial big bang” during this reform. “What we want is to work for a republic of solutions for the lives of the French,” he explained, expressing “a shared desire [with Mr. Macron] to change things. But there’s still a lot of work to do.”

For his part, the president of Intermunicipalities of France, Sébastien Martin, affirmed his “satisfaction that the President of the Republic wants to move forward in the field of housing”. “We have been defending for some time this idea of ??the decentralization of the habitat and housing policy, and that we are given the means to carry out thermal renovation, to have regulatory power over Airbnbs”, a- he explained.

The Elysée meeting took place in the absence of David Lisnard, president of the influential Association of Mayors of France (AMF), held back by a long-standing commitment to his city of Cannes. According to the AMF, which “deplored an abnormal decision”, the Elysée Palace refused to allow the association to be represented by its vice-president.