The least we can say is that she didn’t do any lace-ups or half-measures. If the face of Elsa Marcel, 32, is barely known locally to Saint-Denis residents, she still appears frequently in the media and on TV. From Sainte-Soline to Nahel, through the Palestinian struggle, this young lawyer at the Seine-Saint-Denis bar was at the forefront of public freedom, the right of expression and denounced with passion and consistency “repressive oppression”.
Today, he wants to make his difference heard in a municipal campaign in Saint-Denis, where he has lived for ten years and where he has just established his office. The lawyer, who was appointed four years ago, plans to find a place among the names better known to voters, namely the names he calls “professional politicians.”
