Europe 1 with AFP 9:42 p.m., March 11, 2022, modified at 9:42 p.m., March 11, 2022

"In this country undermined today by inequalities from an early age, at school, then at the start of their professional lives, and throughout their careers, my adversary is injustice!" , said the candidate for the Elysée.

François Hollande marked his campaign in 2012 with his formula: "My opponent is the world of finance."

Block energy prices, increase the minimum wage, maintain retirement at 62: at a meeting in Rennes, socialist Anne Hidalgo said on Friday that her opponent was "injustice", tackling an outgoing president "and from the right and of right".

"In this country undermined today by inequalities from an early age, at school, then at the start of their professional lives, and throughout their careers, my adversary is injustice!" , said the candidate for the Elysée.

The PS candidate François Hollande had marked his victorious campaign in 2012 with his formula: "My adversary is the world of finance."

2% of voting intentions

In front of some 800 conquered people, gathered in the Halle Martinot on the famous Place des Lices, Anne Hidalgo, in great difficulty in the polls, called for "change policy", "change majority" and above all "change future! ", the slogan of his presidential campaign.

"If the French people trust me, from May, I will freeze energy prices, I will lower the VAT applied to them to 5.5%, I will increase the Smic by 15% and I will ask the partners social to open salary negotiations in all professional branches", explained Anne Hidalgo, credited with around 2% of the voting intentions.

In the presence of the mayors of Rennes and Nantes Nathalie Appéré and Johanna Rolland, her campaign manager, but also the former mayor of Rennes Edmond Hervé and the climatologist Jean-Jouzel, the candidate tackled President Macron: "When we says 'neither right nor left', we know, it's 'and right and right'."

A project "not made to join the shelves"

Defending a project "credible, serious, and not made to join the shelves", Anne Hidalgo warned: if Emmanuel Macron is re-elected, "all these regression reforms attempted for five years, we will undergo them without remission in the next five years. ", "starting with the retirement age at 65" - proposal of the presidential candidate confirmed this week.