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Yet the cooking livestreams that he broadcasts from his tiny Paris apartment have attracted a huge audience on TikTok. The 33-year-old spends hours preparing dozens of meals before hopping on his bike and distributing the food to people living on the streets of Paris. Manu Solidaire — CNNWhen Solidaire first began delivering his meals in 2022, he said that he wore a GoPro camera on his bike helmet for his own security. “It’s good for me and good for them.”Solidaire found a new mission and started up his TikTok livestreams hoping to share recipes and sharpen his cooking skills. Solidaire has his camera mounted on his helmet when he distributes meals around Paris.
Persons: CNN — Manu Solidaire, that’s, Solidaire, , , Manu Solidaire —, It’s, L’award d’honneur, , ’ ”, ” Solidaire, ’ Manu Organizations: CNN, Manu Solidaire — CNN, Olympic Games, Solidaire Locations: Paris
MONTREAL, Dec 9 (Reuters) - Quebec on Friday passed a law ending a requirement for elected officials to take an oath to Britain's King Charles, agreeing to make such a show of fealty optional. Charles, 73, became king of the United Kingdom and the head of state of 14 other nations, including Canada, when his mother, Queen Elizabeth, died in September. "It's a beautiful moment for Quebec democracy," said PQ leader Paul St-Pierre Plamondon on Twitter. The PQ's three elected lawmakers tried unsuccessfully last week to enter the legislature after declining to take the oath. Reporting by Allison Lampert in Montreal; editing by John StonestreetOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
MONTREAL, Dec 1 (Reuters) - A Quebec political party opposed to swearing an oath to Britain's King Charles said it expects to introduce legislation on Thursday that would make such fealty optional. Left-leaning Quebec solidaire, whose members grudgingly took the oath that is required for elected officials, plans to introduce a bill in the Canadian province's national assembly, a party spokesperson said on Wednesday. It's not clear whether the party which represents just 11 ridings in the 125 seat assembly would have widespread support. It comes after the death of Queen Elizabeth in September revived debate among Canadians on whether the country should continue with the decades-old system of British monarchy. "It is, I think, a relic from the past," Gabriel Nadeau-Dubois, a co-spokesperson for Quebec solidaire, said in an interview.
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