A year after its establishment, the "whatever the cost" of Emmanuel Macron to deal with the coronavirus crisis will soon end.

The executive is working on a timetable allowing a "gradual disconnection of aid".

A potentially explosive decision, less than a year from the presidential election.

Emmanuel Macron's famous "whatever the cost" is soon to expire.

A year after the Head of State hammered home this formula, which has become the government's leitmotif, directly in front of millions of French people, it seems to have had its day.

The government is thus working "to gradually disconnect aid", an adviser to Prime Minister Jean Castex told Europe 1. 

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A potentially explosive decision ...

Because with the vaccination campaign accelerating day by day, the executive believes that the French health situation should improve in the spring and that the economy will pick up.

It is therefore mechanically that the government asks itself the question of maintaining "whatever the cost".

But the subject is extremely sensitive, even explosive, since millions of French people benefit from aid such as partial unemployment or even EMP. 

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... less than a year from the presidential election

All the more so since undermining a system that allows the crisis to be cushioned from an economic point of view, but also from a social point of view, less than a year from the 2022 presidential election is a decision that has strong political weight.

But it seems that the executive is ready to take the risk, and therefore recognizes working on an exit schedule of "whatever the cost".

Moreover, Jean Castex has in mind to reach a method agreement with the social partners, which he receives Monday morning in Matignon.