On Monday, the French government is looking for ways to get out of the political crisis after the demonstrations against the security law and police violence, at a time when the government finds itself trapped between a left-wing protest base and a right-wing electoral base essential for President Emmanuel Macron.

French President Emmanuel Macron summoned Prime Minister Jean Castex, Interior and Justice Ministers Gerald Darmanan and Eric Dupont Moretti, and heads of parliamentary majority blocs, to meet in the Elysee to discuss developments related to the comprehensive security law and police violence.

Macron has called on the government to submit quick proposals to restore confidence between citizens and the police.

Today, the French Parliament is expected to hear Interior Minister Gerald Darmanan on issues of police violence against the background of the attack on the French producer of African descent, Michel Zeclair.

The four police officers were formally charged in this case, two under arrest and two under judicial supervision.

The French judiciary conditioned the accusation as the practice of "deliberate beating, exacerbated by racist motives," which contributed to the increase in tension throughout the country.

A double problem:


Zeclair's case exploded last week after the publication of a video of being beaten by police officers, in conjunction with the controversy over the Comprehensive Security Law, which, in Article 24, imposes restrictions on taking and publishing pictures of police officers.

Tensions also increased after the publication of pictures of clashes, and at the end of Saturday's demonstrations in Paris, a policeman was subjected to a violent attack, while a hundred policemen were wounded.

"We have a double problem ahead, the problem of approaching Article 24 and the problem of violence directed at policemen," said Minister in Charge of Relations with Parliament Marc Vesno, adding, "It is clear that many ambiguities remain."

Macron and his government find themselves faced with a sensitive option to negotiate a way out of the crisis.

After he came to power in 2017, benefiting from the votes of the right and left, the president appears to be caught between the two currents.

While Girral Darmanan, the Interior Minister, has been tasked with attracting right-wing voters, the divided left is trying to unite its sects behind the security file to gain more support and weaken the presidential majority, which already finds itself in a difficult position.

Le Monde newspaper quoted a pro-Macron deputy as saying that "the Darmanan line is fueling the debate and breaking the point of balance in the electoral base of the majority."

On the far right, Marine Le Pen denounced the "recurrent chaos" in France with a government that "lost control" and proved to be "complacent" with activists of the extreme left.

The time for retreat and


on the left, the Socialist Party, the Greens and the extreme left agree to condemn the government's tightening of its security grip, and those currents demanded the withdrawal of the "comprehensive security" bill.

And left-wing MP Adrian Katinan said Sunday that "there is a moment when we have to know that the time has come to retreat."

As for the leader of the Socialist Bloc in Parliament, Olivier Faure, he considered that "the president of the republic has to choose who he is. He must choose whether Darmanan or (Didier's Inspector General of Police) is righteous, or on the contrary, if he is a republican, as he says."

President Macron last week considered the photos showing Zeclair being beaten as a "shame" for France.

For the third time this year, Macron asked the government on Friday to "quickly submit proposals to reaffirm the bond of trust that should exist naturally between the French and those who protect them, and to combat all forms of discrimination more effectively."