In this series, the teams from the magazine “13h15” delve into the daily lives of political figures until 2027, the date on which the outgoing President of the Republic will no longer be able to run again. They confide their emotions and their strategies.
The magazine “1:15 p.m. on Sunday” (X, #1:15 p.m.) offers a new episode of the new series “Successions”. She supports around twenty public figures in their professional, but also personal, lives until 2027, the date on which the outgoing President of the Republic will not be able to stand for re-election.
No pre-established scenario for this series since these personalities play their own “role” as events arise. “1:15 p.m. THE Sunday” follows them in their real lives, their real projects, their emotions and even their ulterior motives.
While the main axes of the “asylum and immigration” law have been debated since Monday November 6, 2023 in the Senate, the “Successions” series invited elected officials from the National Assembly and the European Parliament, all political parties combined, to contact stakeholders on the ground, associations, public authorities, administrative jurisdictions, to report on migratory flows and the questions they raise, outside our borders and on French territory.
Lampedusa, symbol of the migration crisis
After a major tour of France, the “Successions” teams, accompanied by women and politicians, also went to the island of Lampedusa, in Italy, following the first massive arrivals of migrants during the summer of 2023. The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) revealed on Friday September 29 that between June and August, at least 990 people were shipwrecked in the central Mediterranean, three times more than in 2022, when 334 migrants had lost his life.
The “Successions” teams also flew over the waters of the Mediterranean to report on boat rescues in the company of the pilots of the Colibri 2, a reconnaissance aircraft from the humanitarian association Volunteer Pilots.
An episode by Cyril Zha, Tiphaine Honoré, Jérome Mars and Gianni Collot.
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