French
prime minister to face potential ousting in high-stakes confidence vote
François
Bayrou to seek parliamentary backing for his unpopular plans to shore up
France’s public finances
Jon
Henley in Paris
Mon 25
Aug 2025 19.25 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/aug/25/francois-bayrou-france-prime-minister-confidence-vote
France’s
embattled prime minister looks likely to be ousted and his government toppled
next month in a high-stakes confidence vote that could plunge the EU’s
second-biggest economy into even deeper political crisis.
François
Bayrou said on Monday that he would seek parliamentary backing for his
unpopular plans to shore up France’s ailing public finances on 8 September,
asking deputies to “confirm the scale” of spending cuts he says are needed to
save €44bn (£38bn) a year.
“We face
an immediate danger, which we must tackle … otherwise we have no future,” he
said of the country’s huge debt burden, adding that the vote would focus on
whether MPs agreed with the gravity of the danger, and choose the path to fix
it.
He said:
“There are moments … when only a calculated risk can allow you to escape a more
serious risk. It is a matter of the survival of our state, the image of our
nation, and each and every family.”
Bayrou
said France was going through a “decisive moment”. If the government secured a
majority in the confidence vote, it would be confirmed, he said, but “if it
does not have a majority, the government will fall”.
Early
reactions suggested the centrist prime minister could well lose his gamble,
toppling a government that was formed only last December after the premature
collapse of his predecessor Michel Barnier’s even shorter-lived administration.
The
leader of the opposition party National Rally (RN), Jordan Bardella, said his
far-right party would “never vote in favour of a government whose decisions are
making the French suffer”. Bayrou had in effect announced “the end of his
government”, he said.
Manuel
Bompard of the radical left Unbowed France (LFI) said: “The chips are down, and
it is up to everyone to stake out their position clearly.” His party’s deputies
“will vote on 8 September to bring down the government”, Bompard said.
The Green
party leader, Marine Tondelier, said on social media her parliamentary group
would also vote against the government, as did the Communist party (PCF).
Tondelier said Bayrou’s announcement amounted “de facto to a resignation”.
Olivier
Faure, the leader of the centre-left Socialist party (PS), also said it would
vote against the government. Bayrou had “chosen to go”, Faure said, adding that
it was “unimaginable” that PS or any other opposition party would vote for him.
Bayrou
acknowledged that the vote was a gamble. “Yes, it’s risky – but it’s even
riskier not to do anything,” he told a press conference. France’s budget
deficit hit 5.8% of GDP last year, nearly double the official EU limit of 3%.
Opposition
leaders said that if the government did fall, they would demand the dissolution
of parliament and new elections. Bardella said: “Our fellow citizens are
waiting for a change and a return to the ballot box: we are ready.”
Nevertheless,
President Emmanuel Macron, whose shock decision to dissolve parliament in June
2024 produced an assembly divided into three opposing groups, none of them with
anything like a majority, is thought unlikely to want to repeat the experiment.
Analysts
believe Macron is more likely to try to avoid another early election, instead
aiming to appoint a new prime minister – although who that might be, and how
they might be any more effective, is open to question.
The
confidence vote is due to be held two days before planned protests across
France against the government’s austerity budget that have been widely relayed
on social media and are supported by LFI and some trade unions.
The calls
have drawn comparisons to the gilets jaunes (yellow vests) protests that
erupted in 2018 over fuel price increases and the cost of living, eventually
spiralling into a broad movement that seriously challenged Macron during his
first term.

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