The strategies of elected officials to limit their alcohol consumption while traveling

Since its opening on February 25, ministers, deputies, senators, mayors and other elected officials have paraded at the Paris Agricultural Show

The strategies of elected officials to limit their alcohol consumption while traveling

Since its opening on February 25, ministers, deputies, senators, mayors and other elected officials have paraded at the Paris Agricultural Show. Along the stands, they are often invited for a drink or two. This innocent proposal can sometimes backfire, which is why they now show ingenuity in politely refusing to raise their elbows, reports Le Parisien. “We are solicited all the time, the temptation is great. You have to be vigilant, it's very dangerous, ”says Nicolas Lacroix, president of the Haute-Marne departmental council on a daily basis. According to him, refusing a drink “could be perceived as a lack of friendliness. »

In order to avoid embarrassment, Jean-Michel Jacques, MP for Morbihan, developed an effective strategy: "I keep my glass in my hand for a long time without touching it. If it's full, I'm not bothered. If it's empty, I'm dead,” he explains. "We have to go home immediately after the meeting," said Jean-Louis Le Masle, mayor of Inguiniel in Morbihan.

Some elected officials publicly display their opposition to alcohol. In Lambersart, near Lille, Mayor Nicolas Bouche has decided to toast with tomato juice or orange juice. During official ceremonies, the city councilor even prohibited the free distribution of alcohol. "I don't understand that the community is offering a toxic product," he said. Fanny Chappé, the mayor of Paimpol, in the Côtes-d'Armor, wants to make her sobriety an electoral argument. "My mother, who was deputy mayor of Lorient, told me: 'Be careful, I'm alerting you to social alcoholism,'" she recalls. The chosen one now highlights her sports practice, running, which allows her to relieve the pressure linked to her position.