Crab me would have been enough cut it Dominique de Villepin

A low sky, a recurrent drizzle and a Dominique de Villepin smile to the lips, tasting "the fun to be there", followed by a swarm of journalists. Two weeks after the announcement of his release in the trial Clearstream, former Prime Minister offered yesterday a displacement tailor-made in Finistère. The lands of one of his supporters, Member of UMP Jacques Le Guen, deprived of the head of the list for the regional in Brittany for the benefit of the Bernadette Malgorn sarkozyste. Even though he was careful to praise the merits of his "friend", one who hides more want to provide an "alternative to the right" in 2012 did not spoke March deadlines. Nor he spoke Clearstream, which remains for him a sword of Damocles after the decision of the Prosecutor's Office to appeal the case.

Yesterday, Dominique de Villepin wanted to talk about rural and agriculture-"life issues" - and always of the France. With a double message directed to opinion: he is working on a presidential project and failure to to be never rubbed by universal suffrage, is "closer to the concerns" of the French. "There are in France many suffering not sufficiently taken into account", he said, saying he, him, "the general interest firmly instilled in the body".

Beating drum, the last head of Government of Jacques Chirac visited three farms, a cooperative, a rural family home and a Conference Center, met with local elected officials and offered a long bath of crowd in a market. Following the "great example" of the former President, has spent the day to "test the waters the codend of cows" and shake hands, hammering the "passion" of his grandparents for agriculture in the Limousin, his own love of the 'terroirs' "bouchon" and the "beautiful" French agriculture.

Enarque training, diplomat by profession, passionate about history and literature, famous for his speech to the UN against the war in Iraq, former Prime Minister is now in Defender rural (as suburbs, companion he has spent its previous movements). During the visit, Jacques Le Guen has said he regretted that it had not been there the previous evening to taste excellent grilled lobster. "Crab me would have been enough!", cut it Dominique de Villepin.

"The France calls".

Accompanied by his guard approaches, the former Prime Minister in fact took a perverse pleasure to Nicolas Sarkozy for target, even though he has never specifically referred to it. He criticized the tax carbon, characterized as a "tax on the countryside". It pinned its agricultural policy, relevant only if the Minister of Agriculture, Bruno Le Maire, his former Chief of staff at Matignon, "is evil", "nothing cannot replace the interest and commitment of the head of State." Especially, it étrillé the debate on national identity, accusing Nicolas Sarkozy to "of the policy as it plays to the flipper. Yesterday, Dominique de Villepin was in the countryside, happy to leave poses the threat of his candidacy for the presidential, he has "hard head". Front of the militants, last night, he warned: "the France calls US, she needs us, and we're here to serve.".