Europe
France's
political crisis: who might become its next prime minister?
By Reuters
December 5,
20244:33 PM GMT+1Updated 15 hours ago
https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/who-might-become-frances-next-prime-minister-2024-12-05/
PARIS, Dec 5
(Reuters) - French President Emmanuel Macron searched on Thursday for a new
prime minister to replace Michel Barnier, who officially resigned a day after
opposition lawmakers voted to topple his government.
Here are
some of the possible candidates whose names are circulating in political
circles and in French media:
SEBASTIEN
LECORNU
Sebastian
Lecornu defected from the centre-right The Republicans party and rallied behind
Macron's 2017 presidency, going on to become one of the president's staunchest
allies.
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He joined
Macron's government alongside Bruno Le Maire, Macron's long-serving finance
minister, and former interior minister Gerald Darmanin who had also both
defected from the conservatives.
Lecornu, 38,
most recently served as defence minister in Barnier's outgoing government,
overseeing increases in defence spending and France’s support of military aid
to Ukraine.
Investigative
news website Mediapart and newspaper Liberation reported that Lecornu had dined
earlier in the year with Macron's arch-rival, Marine Le Pen of the far-right
National Rally (RN), and they had discussed the war in Ukraine. Lecornu denied
the encounter.
FRANCOIS
BAYROU
Francois
Bayrou, 73, is a centrist veteran whose Democratic Movement (MoDem) party has
been a part of Macron’s ruling alliance since 2017.
Bayrou, a
longtime mayor of the south-western town of Pau who has made his rural roots
central to his political identity, decided against running a fourth
presidential race in 2017, instead rallying behind Macron.
Macron
appointed Bayrou as justice minister but he resigned only weeks later amid an
investigation into his party’s alleged fraudulent employment of parliamentary
assistants.
He was
cleared of fraud charges this year.
BERNARD
CAZENEUVE
Bernard
Cazeneuve was a senior member of the Socialist Party before he quit in 2022 in
anger over the party’s decision to form an electoral pact with the hard-left
France Unbowed (LFI).
Cazeneuve,
61, served as prime minister during the final months of socialist Francois
Hollande's presidency. Before that, he was interior minister, in charge of
security during the Charlie Hebdo attack and the Islamist militant assault in
Paris on Nov. 13, 2015.
The choice
of Cazeneuve would be designed to encourage Socialist lawmakers to move away
from the alliance with LFI, Greens and Communists and to expand a centrist
ruling group.
His name had
also circulated in the summer as Macron sought a prime minister following an
inconclusive snap election that delivered the current fractured parliament. In
the end, he was passed over for Barnier.
XAVIER
BERTRAND
Xavier
Bertrand, 59, is a centre-right politician who heads the northern
de-industrialised region of Hauts de France, where Macron has sought to develop
an ecosystem around electric vehicle batteries.
Bertrand
served as a minister under the conservative presidencies of Jacques Chirac and
Nicolas Sarkozy and took part in the Republicans' primary contest ahead of the
2022 presidential election.
Bertrand, a
former insurance salesman once nicknamed "floc floc" for the sound
his rubber-soled shoes made on parliament's stone floor, was also among the
names Macron considered in the summer for the role of prime minister.
FRANCOIS
BAROIN
Francois
Baroin, 59, is a centre-right career politician, whose father was a student
friend of the late President Chirac.
He served
briefly as finance minister, following a stint as budget minister, at the
height of Europe's sovereign debt crisis in 2011-2012. He was named chairman of
Barclays France in 2022.
Baroin has
been mayor of Troyes in Champagne since 1995
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Editing by
Richard Lough

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