Emmanuel
Macron appoints his third prime minister in a year
Sébastien
Lecornu, a presidential ally, is tasked with bringing France’s divided parties
together to pass a budget
Angelique
Chrisafis in Paris
Tue 9 Sep
2025 20.29 BST
Sébastien
Lecornu, a close ally of Emmanuel Macron, has been appointed prime minister,
tasked with consulting France’s divided political parties to try to find a
consensus on the budget.
The
39-year-old began his political career in the traditional rightwing party of
Nicolas Sarkozy before moving to Macron’s centre in 2017 and is seen as
fiercely loyal to the president.
His
promotion from defence minister shows Macron’s determination to press on with a
minority government that stands firmly behind his pro-business economic agenda,
under which taxes on business and the wealthy have been cut and the retirement
age raised.
However,
in an unusual move in French politics, Macron’s office said the president had
asked Lecornu to hold talks with all political forces in parliament to find
compromises on the budget and other policies before naming his cabinet.
Lecornu
started out in politics as an MP’s assistant, aged 19, and became France’s
youngest ever ministerial adviser in 2008 when he worked for Bruno Le Maire. In
2015, Lecornu became the youngest-ever president of a French département, that
of Eure in Normandy, after serving as mayor of his home town of Vernon.
Lecornu
replaces François Bayrou, who resigned on Tuesday after losing a confidence
vote.
The
authorities are preparing for a day of disruption and protests ranging from
road and school blockades to transport strikes. About 80,000 police and
gendarmes will be deployed across France on Wednesday to monitor a day of
anti-government demonstrations organised under the slogan “block everything”.
The loose
protest movement began to organise at the start of the summer on social media
and was later supported by the CGT union and some leftwing parties.
Protesters
plan to blockade fuel depots, hold go-slow operations on roads and demonstrate
in some city centres. There will be train strikes on some regional services,
particularly in the Paris suburbs. High school and university students may also
stage blockades and protests.
The
“block everything” movement has no centralised leadership, making it hard to
assess how big or disruptive the demonstrations may be.
The
government is concerned they could echo the yellow vest protests of 2018, which
started as an anti-fuel tax movement and became a prolonged anti-government
protest organised from the ground up without a clear leader or political
allegiance. Unlike the yellow vests, however, who began by demonstrating on
Saturdays on roundabouts wearing hi-vis vests, the “block everything” movement
does not appear to have one focus or style of protest.
A bigger
day of trade union strikes will take place across France on 18 September.
Bayrou
lost a confidence vote on Monday that has plunged France into government
collapse and political crisis. About 11,000 protesters gathered in front of
town halls across France on Monday night to celebrate his ousting with what
they called “bye bye Bayrou” farewell drinks.
Lecornu
is Macron’s third French prime minister in a year and his first task will be
the major challenge of agreeing a budget among a divided parliament before
choosing a government.
Since the
French president called a snap election last year, the parliament is split
between three groups – left, centre and far right – with no absolute majority.
It was uncertain who as prime minister could find consensus on the budget
without also facing a similar ousting.
Bayrou,
74, lasted nine months in office before being removed over his unpopular
debt-reduction budget. Before him, the rightwinger Michel Barnier lasted only
three months until he was ousted over the budget.
Gabriel
Attal, a former prime minister and head of Macron’s centrists, told France Info
radio that France was suffering from an “absolutely distressing spectacle” of
instability in which “the government falls every three to six months.” He said
“we have to get out of this spiral”, adding there had to be a form of
compromise agreed between all the political blocs.

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