"They cheat and we pay": when Allier elected representative Annie Corne dares everything and hires a private company to spy on RSA recipients

The Allier Departmental Council has commissioned Tessi, a service provider tasked with tracking down alleged fraudsters on behalf of the community. The total cost of the operation: €50,000. Opposition officials, who were presented with a fait accompli, denounce a policy obsessed with stigmatizing the most vulnerable, disregarding the social missions assigned to the community.
Annie Corne is a "rebellious" woman. The injustice that outrages the vice-president of the Allier departmental council, responsible for employment and integration: welfare fraudsters, whose state, in its culpable inertia, is complicit in allowing them to prosper.
If RSA recipients didn't exist, one might wonder what would still make the right-wing politician – who was a speech therapist in another life – run, given that they seem to literally obsess her, as this little anthology of...
L'Humanité