Le Pen
turns the screw on Macron ahead of crunch budget talks
The
far-right leader spoke as new Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu is launching
critical talks on the 2026 budget.
Marine Le
Pen and her top lieutenants have likened a potential agreement between Emmanuel
Macron's camp and the Socialists to a mutual kiss of death. |
September
14, 2025 7:05 pm CET
By Marion
Solletty
https://www.politico.eu/article/marine-le-pen-france-budget-far-right-national-rally/
BORDEAUX,
France — As France’s newly appointed prime minister is sweating about crunch
budget talks, Marine Le Pen is relishing the prospect.
The
far-right leader fired up a crowd of supporters on Sunday in Bordeaux as she
lashed out at President Emmanuel Macron for bringing the country to the verge
of chaos, casting her party as the only real alternative after years of
business-as-usual by mainstream parties.
“The
country is blocked by two forces … on the one hand a president who organizes
institutional paralysis … on the other hand [far-left] France Unbowed that is
trying to bring the country to a standstill by having hooded petits bourgeois
burn trash cans,” she said in reference to recent nationwide protests supported
by leftist groups.
Before Le
Pen took the stage, her former partner and National Rally heavyweight Louis
Aliot gave a fiery speech on democracy and freedom of speech, accusing the far
left of fueling violence as he paid tribute to slain U.S. conservative
influencer Charlie Kirk, eliciting roars from the crowd.
The
far-right leader spoke as newly appointed Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu is
launching critical talks with parties from the outgoing center-right coalition
and extending an olive branch to the moderate left to pass the 2026 budget and
cut the country’s jaw-dropping deficit.
Le Pen in
her speech put the blame squarely on Macron for the seemingly never-ending
political crisis and accused him of “confiscating the ball to try and stop the
game” by appointing a third prime minister from his camp in just over a year
despite record low popularity and a shrinking number of MPs.
Re-upping
her call for a snap election, Le Pen left it to her top lieutenant, National
Rally President Jordan Bardella, to expand on familiar red button issues such
as migration and France’s contribution to the EU, focusing instead on the dire
state of the country’s economy and its decline on the international stage.
While Le
Pen is keen on showing that her party was not an agent of chaos but fighting
for voters’ priorities, she is leaving very little breathing room to the new
prime minister, signaling that she is willing to topple as many prime ministers
as needed on her way to power.
The
far-right party’s take-no-prisoners approach to budget talks is seen as a
winning game among its top brass. A deal between Macron’s camp, the mainstream
right and the moderate left would be political gold for Le Pen, reinforcing her
narrative that the political elite is colluding to keep her from power.
“The
National Rally is not up for sale to the highest Macronist bidder, as opposed
to [the conservative] Les Républicains and the Socialists,” Bardella hammered
home on stage. “We are not like them.”
On
Saturday, Lecornu signaled his intention to seek out support within moderate
groups on the left in a wide-ranging interview with local newspapers, extending
several entreaties and ruling out “a political deal” with the National Rally.
In
private, Le Pen and her top lieutenants have likened a potential agreement
between Macron’s camp and the Socialists to a mutual kiss of death.
While the
far-right leader has refrained until now to call for the French president to
step down, the crowd on Sunday chanted “Macron, démission,” seemingly following
the lead of Bardella and others in the party’s top brass, who are urging the
president to step down — something he has repeatedly ruled out.
That
would present a potential challenge to Le Pen who is currently barred from
running in an election over embezzlement — she denies all charges and will face
an appeal trial in January to try and overturn the verdict.
To her
supporters’ delight, she made it clear on stage that she was going nowhere. The
far right leader emerged from the summer in a hawkish mood, turning the thumb
down on the outgoing prime minister quicker than anyone thought, and boosting
her supporters’ morale ahead of local elections in March.
“I am a
determined, stubborn, combative woman, and I am not going to apologize for
it.”

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