The Minister of Culture, guest of Europe 1 Tuesday morning, promised to the intermittent of the show, who are suffering the full brunt of the coronavirus crisis, an aid device, "which protects them over the long term". 

INTERVIEW

Particularly affected by the coronavirus crisis, the intermittent workers of the show claim to "play their survival". In recent days, they have arrested Emmanuel Macron on several occasions, via forums and petitions. "If the state does nothing, more than half of the show's intermittent workers fall into poverty," comedian Samuel Churin warned Europe 1 on Thursday. 

"We are determined to adopt a device that protects them over the long term," replied the Minister of Culture, Franck Riester, guest of Europe 1 Tuesday morning. He defended the "strong and powerful" measures already adopted since the start of the health crisis. "We have taken emergency measures so that in periods of confinement, artists can benefit from their rights, from partial unemployment," he said. 

What about the future? "The crisis will last, so we must adopt long-term arrangements," recognizes Franck Riester, claiming to be working on this subject with the Minister of Labor, Muriel Pénicaud.