French Justice Minister Christiane Taubira quits over controversial dual-nationality measure

French Justice Minister Christiane Taubira quit on Wednesday, apparently in protest at government efforts to strip convicted French-born terrorists of their citizenship if they have a second nationality.
Taubira, popular among the ruling Socialists of President Francois Hollande but a target of criticism from right-wing politicians, tweeted: “Sometimes to resist means staying, sometimes resisting means leaving.”
The outspoken 63-year-old, who is from French Guiana, became France’s most senior black politician when she was named to the justice ministry post in 2012.
She has often been at the centre of controversy, whether as the victim of racial slurs or as she forged the country’s same-sex marriage bill despite fierce opposition from conservatives in the country.
Sometimes to resist means staying, sometimes resisting means leaving
Her latest battle saw her unable to see eye-to-eye with members of her own party over the controversial “loss of nationality” measure.