Macron
Reappoints Lecornu as France’s Prime Minister
President
Emmanuel Macron is trying to calm the political turmoil that has gripped the
country and jeopardized the passage of a budget.
Aurelien
Breeden
By
Aurelien Breeden
Reporting
from Paris
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/10/world/europe/france-prime-minister-lecornu-macron.html
Published
Oct. 10, 2025
Updated
Oct. 11, 2025, 1:58 a.m. ET
President
Emmanuel Macron of France reappointed Sébastien Lecornu as the country’s prime
minister on Friday, less than a week after Mr. Lecornu resigned — a risky,
whiplash-inducing move that could backfire as Mr. Macron tries to steady a
roiling political crisis.
The
president’s office said in a statement that Mr. Lecornu, a centrist and a close
ally of Mr. Macron, had been tasked with forming a government, just days after
his previous cabinet of centrists and conservatives imploded.
A new
government formed by Mr. Lecornu would be France’s fourth in less than a year,
a degree of governmental instability not seen since the founding of the
country’s Fifth Republic in 1958.
And it
was far from clear that Mr. Lecornu’s reappointment would do much to help the
situation. Political opponents — outraged that Mr. Macron had once again
appointed an ally — were already vowing on Friday to topple Mr. Lecornu with a
no-confidence motion in the lower house of Parliament, known as the National
Assembly.
Several
left-wing parties and a far-right party declared immediately after the
appointment was announced that they would support such a motion, bringing Mr.
Lecornu dangerously close to the number of votes required to oust him.
Even some
of the president’s allies had said that reverting back to Mr. Lecornu was a
mistake that did not address the French people’s intense frustration with Mr.
Macron, whose approval rating has reached new lows.
France
has endured months of partisan gridlock in the National Assembly, leaving the
country without stable governance, rattling financial markets, unsettling
consumers and businesses, and jeopardizing the country’s ability to pass a
budget by the end of the year, even as it faces a looming financial crisis.
“I accept
— out of a sense of duty — the mission entrusted to me by the President of the
Republic to do everything possible to give France a budget by the end of the
year and to respond to the everyday problems faced by our fellow citizens,” Mr.
Lecornu said on X.
He added:
“We must put an end to this political crisis, which is exasperating the French
people, and to this instability, which is damaging to France’s image and
interests.”
Legally,
nothing prevents Mr. Macron from reappointing Mr. Lecornu, who has been a
member of every government since Mr. Macron was first elected in 2017.
Politically,
however, the decision infuriated many of Mr. Macron’s opponents, who blame him
for repeatedly refusing to appoint an opposition prime minister, even though
his centrist alliance lost badly in snap elections over a year ago.
Since
those elections, the National Assembly has been deadlocked among three main
political blocs, none of which has a majority: a collection of left-wing
parties; a mix of conservatives and centrists; and a nationalist,
anti-immigrant far right led by the National Rally party.
Mr.
Macron, who met with party leaders on Friday, has relied on a succession of
unstable center-right minority governments, not heeding calls from left-wing
parties who say they should have their chance at governing.
Jordan
Bardella, the head of the far-right National Rally party, said on X that Mr.
Macron was “more isolated and disconnected than ever.”
“The
National Rally will, of course, immediately censure this futile alliance, whose
sole raison d’être is fear of dissolution, i.e., of the people,” he added,
referring to Mr. Macron’s ability to dissolve the National Assembly and call
snap elections.
Mr.
Lecornu’s departure, on Monday, had immediately increased the pressure on Mr.
Macron. Some of his opponents argued that the only way to break the deadlock
was to call new parliamentary elections — or even for Mr. Macron to resign.
But Mr.
Macron quickly ruled out those options. Mr. Lecornu, after holding last-ditch
talks with political parties at the president’s request, said on Wednesday that
a majority of parties in the lower house did not want new elections and wanted
to pass a budget before year’s end.
Mr.
Macron appeared to be gambling that most parties, even those who said Mr.
Lecornu’s appointment was a provocation, would compromise on a budget bill
because they were too afraid of new elections, which polls predict would be
dominated by the far right.
But that
is a risky bet, and there remain major budget disagreements on what spending to
cut and what taxes to raise. Mr. Macron’s 2023 pension overhaul, which raised
the legal age of retirement to 64 from 62 and is still widely unpopular, is one
of the biggest sticking points.
Left-wing
parties were hoping that Mr. Macron would be open to suspending the measure,
despite his extreme reluctance to see any part of his pro-business agenda
rolled back. But the parties said after their meeting with Mr. Macron that he
had suggested only that the overhaul’s full implementation could be delayed
until after 2027, when France’s next presidential election will be held.
Mr.
Lecornu said on Friday that “all the issues raised during the consultations
held in recent days will be open to parliamentary debate,” although he did not
specifically mention the pension overhaul.
Aurelien
Breeden is a reporter for The Times in Paris, covering news from France.


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