Who is Jacline Mourad?

Jacques Mouraud is 51-year-old French woman, who via a video appeal, is considered to have been the initiator of mass protests in France against fuel growth. Its video was seen more than 6 million times on the Internet. In the video that made it famous, with a sarcastic voice, it [...]
Jacques Mouraud is 51-year-old French woman, who via a video appeal, is considered to have been the initiator of mass protests in France against fuel growth. Its video was seen more than 6 million times on the Internet.
In the video that made it famous, with a sarcastic voice, it addresses the French president by rejecting energy measures taken by the government of Edward Philip. Between that and the rising price of fuel. But and the proposal for lowering the speed limit from 90 to 80 miles per hour to reduce the victims of incidents in the suburbs, the French do not like it at all.
So Jacques Mouraud, with the motto “enough on taxes”, criticises Macro and conditions that must meet the vehicles that circulate in the country, reminding him that and the head of the French state moves in a vehicle that does not meet these conditions.
In a video that lasts four and a half minutes, the woman accuses her president of persecuting drivers, thus becoming a symbol of the discontent of the French suburb, rural areas, and other cities.
Born in Bretanja, a resident of a village of 750 residents -- the former wife of a military man -- she claims she lives with less than a thousand euros a month.
She works as a musician and a fire safety agent, but she is self - exalted and an expert at hypnotizing people who want to quit smoking.
Mourad claims he believes in direct democracy and not at all in politicians, adding that in recent elections he has handed over the white ballot.
It accuses the powerful in Paris of ignoring the problems of everyday life of those who do not live in big cities and who do not have enough income.
While her weekly portrait is protagonist in France's newspapers and televisions, the state secretary for ecology has responded via a video on Twitter, saying there is no government conspiracy against vehicles.












