Defiant
Macron vows to stay on as French president and will appoint PM within days
President
says he will remain in power until 2027, amid political turmoil following
collapse of government
Guardian
international staff
Thu 5 Dec
2024 19.47 GMT
The French
president, Emmanuel Macron, has ruled out resigning, saying he will stay in
power until the end of his term in 2027 and will appoint a new prime minister
in the coming days, after the government’s historic collapse plunged France
into political turmoil.
“You have
given me a democratic mandate of five years and I’ll carry it out fully until
its term,” he said in a televised speech to the French people late on Thursday.
Macron, who
is facing the worst political crisis of his two terms as president, criticised
what he called the “cynicism”, lack of responsibility and “sense of chaos” of
opposition politicians who toppled the government in a no-confidence vote on
Wednesday, ending the beleaguered minority coalition of the rightwing prime
minister, Michel Barnier, after only three months.
Macron said
he would not be held responsible for that chaos himself. He said: “I won’t
shoulder other people’s irresponsibility,” He would appoint a prime minister
“in the coming days” and instruct them to form a government “in the general
interest, representing all political forces who can take part”, or who, at
least, would undertake not to bring the government down, he said.
Wednesday’s
no-confidence vote was supported by an alliance of leftwing parties as well as
MPs from Marine Le Pen’s anti-immigration, far-right National Rally, with a
total of 331 lawmakers – a clear majority – voting to topple the government.
Macron accused Le Pen’s party of “choosing disorder”.
France,
which faces a growing public deficit, risks ending the year without a 2025
budget or a stable government, although the constitution allows special
measures that would avert a US-style government shutdown.
Macron must
now find a prime minister to take on the difficult task of leading a minority
government in a deeply divided parliament. It will be France’s fourth prime
minister this year.
The Elysée
Palace is keen to limit any impression of political chaos as Macron prepares to
host world leaders on Saturday – including the US president-elect, Donald Trump
– for the reopening of Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris after the devastating 2019
fire.
Macron said
that by restoring Notre Dame and delivering the Olympics and Paralympics,
France had shown “we can do great things … we can do the impossible”.
Yaël
Braun-Pivet, the president of the national assembly and a member of Macron’s
centrist party, said France could not be allowed to “drift” for long. “There
must not be any political hesitation. We need a leader who can speak to
everyone and work to pass a new budget bill.”
As France
enters a period of political turmoil, the Elysée said Barnier’s government
would deal with current day-to-day issues until a new government was appointed.
No new
parliament elections can be called before July 2025, narrowing Macron’s options
faced with a deeply divided national assembly.
Amid
speculation over who could replace Barnier as prime minister , Macron had lunch
with François Bayrou, a close ally and veteran centrist politician. The
outgoing defence minister, Sébastien Lecornu, denied he was in the running
himself.
Socialists,
Communists and other figures in the left alliance said a new prime minister
must come from the left. Bruno Retailleau, the hardline right interior minister
in Barnier’s government, said the new prime minister should come from the
right, saying “France is rightwing”.
Since Macron
called a sudden and inconclusive snap election in June, the French parliament
has been divided between three groups with no absolute majority. A left
alliance took the largest number of votes but fell short of an absolute
majority; Macron’s centrist grouping suffered losses but is still standing and
Le Pen’s National Rally gained seats but was held back from power by tactical
voting from the left and centre.
“We are now
calling on Macron to go,” said Mathilde Panot, the head of the parliamentary
faction of Jean-Luc Mélenchon’s leftwing party, La France Insoumise, who urged
“early presidential elections”.
Le Pen
conspicuously did not call for Macron’s immediate resignation, but she said
pressure on him would grow.
A poll by
Odoxa Backbone Consulting for Le Figaro found 52% of French people thought the
no-confidence vote was a “good thing”. Among voters for Le Pen’s National Rally
this rose to 72%. “The majority of National Rally voters think that all this is
Emmanuel Macron’s fault,” Gaël Sliman, the head of the pollsters told Le
Figaro. “But some [National Rally voters], 28%, remain worried about the
potential consequences.”
Wednesday’s
vote was the country’s first successful no-confidence vote since a defeat for
Georges Pompidou’s government in 1962, when Charles de Gaulle was president.
Barnier’s government had the shortest lifespan of any administration of
France’s Fifth Republic, which began in 1958.
Barnier, the
EU’s former Brexit negotiator, was appointed by Macron in September after two
months of political paralysis this summer.
Barnier’s
key task, which proved his downfall, was to vote through a budget for 2025 in
which he said he would begin to tackle France’s deficit with €60bn in tax
increases and spending cuts. But after weeks of standoff over the budget,
Barnier on Monday pushed through a social security financing bill, using
article 49.3 of the constitution, which allows a government to force through
legislation without a vote in parliament. This sparked the no-confidence vote.
Barnier’s
minority coalition had been propped up by Le Pen, who, although outside
government, had an unprecedentedly powerful role as Barnier attempted to
placate her to avoid her party joining a no-confidence vote. Barnier had
negotiated with her directly, tapering the budget to her demands.
But Le Pen
pulled rank, saying Barnier’s budget was a danger to the country. She told
French TV on Thursday that the voting system should be changed and proportional
representation introduced.
If
parliament does not pass a budget by 20 December, the government can propose
emergency legislation that would roll over spending limits and tax provisions
from 2024, pending the arrival of a new government and a new 2025 budget bill.
“France
probably won’t have a 2025 budget,” said ING Economics in a note, predicting
that the country “is entering a new era of political instability”.
Moody’s, a
ratings agency, warned that Barnier’s fall “deepens the country’s political
stalemate” and “reduces the probability of a consolidation of public finances”.

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