Pierre Baudis, the nice shot of En Marche in Toulouse
We no longer say En Marche or LREM, but Renaissance. As we no longer want to say Baudis when talking about politics in Toulouse. At 33, Pierre Baudis, son of Dominique and grandson of Pierre, former tutelary figures of the Toulouse rightstands in the legislative elections in the first constituency of Haute-Garonne, under the label of the presidential majority.
A glorious ascent
Pierre Baudis is the third generation of a line of politicians, originating from the basin of Decazeville (Aveyron) eminently respected in Toulouse. His father Dominique Baudis died in 2014, was mayor of Toulouse from 1983 to 2001 and deputy for ten years in the 80s and 90s. The 30-year-old bears the first name of his grandfather, who died in 1997. Pierre Baudis senior led Toulouse just before his son Dominique from 1971 to 1983, he also knew the Palais-Bourbon by exercising the function of deputy for two terms in the 60s-70s. The current mayor (LR) of Toulouse, Jean-Luc Moudenc, does not hide his admiration for
The two missing men left their mark on the Pink City. The congress center in town bears the name of Pierre-Baudis, while Blagnac airport was recently named Dominique-Baudis.
The son who forgot nothing
Pierre Baudis is the first son of Dominique Baudis, born in 1989. He has a half-sister, Florence aged 40 from a previous marriage, and a younger brother aged 24, Benjamin. As a teenager, he was obviously marked by the crazy Alègre affair, this legal, political and media defamation campaign of which his father was the victim in 2003 when he was then head of the CSA.
After studying communication and journalism, Pierre Baudis presents himself as a journalist, he worked at Figaro, Canal+ or Rue89. Specialist in digital communication, he runs Trezy a start-up in this field. In addition, in 2021 he is part of a working group carried out by the former Keeper of the Seals Elisabeth Guigou which gives the Minister of Justice a report on the presumption of innocence, obviously not without echoing the Kabbalah suffered by his father.
The young man has been displaying for several years on the networks his support for Emmanuel Macron. Nor does he hesitate to relay criticisms of those who succumbed to his father’s rivals or enemies, the newspaper _la Dépêche du Mi_di or Philippe Douste-Blazy, mayor of Toulouse at the time of the Alègre affair and who never supported his predecessor.
In the first constituency of Haute-Garonne, the outgoing LREM deputy, dismissed by the presidential majority for cases of alleged harassment Pierre Cabare support his dissident candidacy. Are also candidates for the time being, the young protege of Jean-Luc Moudenc, his road assistant Maxime Boyer (LR) as well as a young sociology researcher from Toulouse Hadrien Clouet (LFI) for the unity of the left.