PARIS (AP) – As they get to know their new Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu, a loyal ally of President Emmanuel Macron who had been remarkably low-key before taking one of the top jobs in the land, the French are also discovering that he has a somewhat unusual habit: He likes to butt heads.
Why is France’s new PM head-butting colleagues? A teenage interest in monks is part of the answer
PARIS (AP) – As they get to know their new Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu, a loyal ally of President Emmanuel Macron who had been remarkably low-key before taking one of the top jobs in the land, the French are also discovering that he has a somewhat unusual habit: He likes to butt heads.
Instead of the greeting that many French use to say hello – two, and in some places even three or four, kisses on the cheeks – the 39-year-old former defense minister has been repeatedly spotted in his first days in office giving gentle head-butts to male colleagues.
Although not new, it’s got French media talking – and digging into the prime minister’s past before politics, when he toyed as a teenager with the idea of becoming a monk.
Le Monde and other French publications say Lecornu’s way of greeting people – mostly men, but sometimes women, too – with soft temple-to-temple bumps stems from time he spent at Saint-Wandrille Abbey, a community of about 30 Benedictine monks in the Normandy region northwest of Paris.