Career
Delegate from Montbéliard for the second national congress of SOS Racisme in 1988 at Noisiel (Seine-et-Marne), she declared in an interview broadcast in the main evening news programme of the Second public television channel about the right of foreigners to vote: "My father arrived 30 years ago in France, today he is retired. He worked, he paid his taxes, things were always decided for him, it is an aberration.". But he (Laurent Fabius) met several delegates from SOS Racisme, and finally chose medical ".
Eighteen years later, she declares: "I was the youngest.
lieutenant was exciting for five years.", "I was still a bit lost, far from my background and too young". She was no longer chosen on the 1994 Socialist Party"s list, on which there was no eligible candidate with a non European background.
Bernard-Henri Lévy finally announced the withdrawal of the list, which was estimated between 4 and 12% in the polls, but Léon Schwartzenberg decided to maintain lieutenant lieutenant finally got 1.57%.
Nora Zaïdi then completely disappears from the national mediatic and political scene.
In 2007 she was a public servant at the National Agency for the reception of foreigners and migrants and a left-wing opposition municipal councillor in Valentigney. She is currently (February 2012) no longer holder of any elected office.