Why
Macron thinks Lecornu can save France from the abyss
Lecornu
has proved his worth in solving political headaches in the past, but will
Macron allow him to make the big concessions needed for a budget deal?
September
15, 2025 4:00 am CET
By Clea
Caulcutt, Pauline de Saint Remy and Elisa Bertholomey
https://www.politico.eu/article/emmanuel-macron-france-sebastien-lecornu-politics/
PARIS —
President Emmanuel Macron has just turned to one of his most trusted
lieutenants — Sébastien Lecornu — to break the political impasse paralyzing
France.
Lecornu,
appointed as prime minister last week, is “the guy [Macron] drinks whiskey with
at 3 a.m.,” said one government adviser, who was granted anonymity to speak
candidly. The former armed forces minister also often spends his holidays with
Macron at the seaside bastion of Fort de Brégançon.
Turning
to one of the devoted inner circle has the air of a last desperate throw of the
dice. If Lecornu can’t save Macron, it’s hard to see who can.
Lecornu
is the fifth French prime minister in less than two years and it still seems
highly unlikely that he will succeed in forcing the bitterly divided National
Assembly to accept the tens of billions of euros of budgetary belt-tightening
that are needed to ward off a debt crisis in the EU’s second-largest economy.
Even
Macron knows it’s a big ask. In comments obtained by POLITICO, the president
insisted the task ahead was not impossible, but admitted it was
“unprecedented.”
So why
does Macron think Lecornu might just be the man to strike a deal?
In short,
the president views him as a fixer who can bridge the political divide. Lecornu
got into the president’s good books by building a wide parliamentary consensus
over increasing the military budget in 2023, and by helping him defuse the
grassroots Yellow Vest protests that gripped the nation in 2018 and 2019.
As a
former conservative, he has “good relations with Les Républicains party” and
represents “continuity” with the president’s past governments, Macron said. On
the other hand he has “earned the respect of leftwing forces” by the way he
handled France’s rearmament in the wake of the war in Ukraine. And during
defense budget talks in 2023 Lecornu was seen as having listened to the
opposition and taken their views on board.
The key
point is that Macron might not send Lecornu into battle unarmed in the way that
he did his previous two prime ministers, EU veteran Michel Barnier and the
centrist François Bayrou. This time, he could allow his premier to make some
meaningful concessions on the core economic agenda.
Until
now, Macron has battled to keep his key achievements untouched, notably his
controversial pension reforms and long-running opposition to tax hikes, despite
election defeats in 2022 and 2024.
“We’ll
have to backtrack on some things.” Macron said. “We must be able to find a
compromise.”
Lecornu
said Sunday that he would no longer pursue his predecessor’s plan to cut two
public holidays.
The man
for the job
France’s
new prime minister may not be well known to the general public, but while still
only 39 years old he has notched a few political successes in his eight years
by Macron’s side, honing skills that will be much needed in the weeks ahead.
As armed
forces minister, Lecornu managed to overcome divisions in a highly fractured
parliament and get more than 400 lawmakers to pass his seven-year military
programming budget in 2023, which saw increased spending for the military.
“Some say
it’s easy to negotiate budget increases,” said a close ally of the president.
“He will tell you it wasn’t.”
Unlike
political grandees Bayrou and Barnier, Lecornu has spent the last years in the
political trenches at the National Assembly and in local politics.
“He knows
how mercurial the National Assembly is, he’ll be maneuvering, he’ll be immersed
in the debate,” said the same ally. “He knows how to negotiate.”
Less well
known, but equally important in these politically volatile times, Lecornu was
instrumental in helping Macron quell the Yellow Vest protests. As minister for
local territories he helped organize a debate between the French president and
local representatives in his Normandy constituency. This first successful
meeting with the French public led to others, and to a tour of France that
helped bring the protests to an end.
Off on
the wrong foot
The true
test of Lecornu’s worth still lies ahead and depends on whether he can strike a
deal with the Socialists without alienating the conservatives, who look set to
continue in government.
The risk
for Lecornu is he’ll get caught in a bidding war he can’t win: The more he
needs a deal, the more concessions opposition parties will demand.
There’s
disappointment among the Socialists from the outset. The moderate left wanted
to see a prime minister appointed from their ranks, and instead will have to
deal with one of Macron’s closest allies.
This
week, Socialist Party leader Olivier Faure warned that no Socialist would join
Lecornu’s government and “if nothing changes” they would not shy from toppling
the government.
If the
moderate left remains outside the government, they will want to extract a high
price for their tacit support. And on budget talks, there’s a massive gap to
bridge.
The
Socialists want to suspend Macron’s flagship reform of pensions, a red line for
the president. They also want a tax on France’s ultra-rich individuals, the
so-called Zucman tax, which has been slammed by Macron’s centrists as a futile
proposal that will just encourage France’s wealthiest to move abroad.
Macron,
however, has signaled some room for maneuver on the scale of the budget cuts
needed. Bayrou’s plans to squeeze the 2026 French budget by €43.8 billion may
well be shelved. The president “prefers structural reform to lopping €3 billion
off the budget,” said the ally quoted above.
There
might be a way. “If he refuses the Zucman tax but increases the minimum wage,
we’ll take a look,” said a Socialist official.
Ultimately,
Lecornu’s secret weapon could turn against him. The man who has Macron’s full
confidence may have to extract uncomfortable concessions from his own boss — if
he wants to survive as prime minister.
This
story has been updated.

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário