Macron
under pressure to call snap parliamentary elections or resign
French
president’s former allies join opponents in demanding he act to end a
spiralling political crisis
Jon
Henley in Paris
Tue 7 Oct
2025 16.23 BST
France’s
president, Emmanuel Macron, is under intense pressure to call snap
parliamentary elections or resign as former allies join his opponents in
demanding he act to end a spiralling political crisis in the EU’s second
biggest economy.
Macron’s
first prime minister on Tuesday urged the president to step down amid mounting
frustration even within the president’s own camp over one of the worst spells
of political chaos in France since the foundation of its Fifth Republic in
1958.
Édouard
Philippe, prime minister from 2017 to 2020 and now leader of a Macron-allied
party, said he should announce an early presidential election once a budget for
next year was adopted. Macron was re-elected in April 2022 for a five-year
term, but since snap legislative elections in 2024 his appointees as prime
minister have been unable to summon a parliamentary majority to pass a budget.
“Time is
of the essence,” Philippe said. “We are not going to prolong what we have been
experiencing for the past six months. Another 18 months is far too long and it
is damaging France. The political game we are playing today is distressing.”
Philippe,
who polls suggest is the best-placed candidate to lead the political centre in
the next presidential elections, was not alone among Macron’s former prime
ministers in distancing himself from the beleaguered head of state.
Gabriel
Attal – whose brief tenure as France’s youngest-ever prime minister ended last
year when Macron called the snap vote that produced France’s present hung
parliament – said he no longer understood the president’s decisions.
Attal,
who now leads the main pro-Macron party, told French media that after burning
through five prime ministers in under two years it was “time to try something
else”, criticising what he called Macron’s “determination to keep control”.
The calls
came after the outgoing prime minister, Sébastien Lecornu, who was appointed
only 28 days ago, resigned with his 14-hour-old cabinet on Monday but was asked
by Macron to hold last-ditch talks with party leaders to try to rally support.
Macron
gave Lecornu until Wednesday evening to try to “define a platform for action
and stability”. However, in a sign of the difficulties he faces, the far-right
National Rally (RN), the largest single party in parliament, refused to attend.
“These
umpteenth negotiations no longer aim to protect the interests of the French
people, but those of the president himself,” said the party, which polls
suggest would finish first in an eventual parliamentary election but is
unlikely to secure a majority.
In a
scathing editorial, Le Monde said the crisis was a “tragic farce” and “yet
another demonstration of the unravelling” of Macron’s second mandate since his
re-election in 2022. “The president finds himself in a major crisis,” it said.
The
newspaper castigated France’s “entire political class”, which it said was
“incapable of rising to the challenge”, preferring to posture in the run-up to
the presidential ballot due in 2027 rather than “build a compromise essential
for the months to come”.
France
has been in political crisis for more than a year since the 2024 election –
called in response to far-right successes in the European parliamentary
elections that year – produced a parliament divided between three more or less
equal blocs: the left, far right and Macron’s own centre-right alliance, with
no majority.
Among
other options, Macron could reappoint Lecornu, select another new prime
minister – possibly a non-party-political technocrat – who would become his
eighth, or dissolve parliament again and hold new legislative elections.
He has
long said he is reluctant hold fresh legislative elections, which polls suggest
would probably return another divided parliament, but on Monday hinted he may
be prepared to do so if Lecornu fails in his last-chance mission.
Macron
has also repeatedly insisted he will not resign before the end of his mandate
in 2027.
The calls
from Macron’s allies echoed similar demands from the president’s opponents on
both the left and far right, including the far-right RN president, Jordan
Bardella, who on Tuesday said he, too, backed fresh parliamentary elections or
an early presidential ballot.
“I call
on the president of the republic to hear the suffering in the country, to come
out of his isolation, and to dissolve the national assembly,” Bardella said.
“We must go back to the French people so they can choose a majority for
themselves.”
Lecornu
met on Tuesday with the leaders of Macron’s centrist alliance and the
conservative Les Républicains (LR), with the parties reportedly agreeing that
finding a deal to urgently pass next year’s planned austerity budget must be
the top priority.
The
political crisis is being played out against the backdrop of France’s deepening
financial woes: its debt-to-GDP ratio is the EU’s third-highest and almost
twice the ceiling permitted under EU rules, as is its projected budget deficit
of nearly 6%.
Lecornu
will need the support of others, however, including the centre-left Socialist
party (PS), to have any hope of a majority in parliament to approve the
legislation. The PS has called for “a change of course” under a new “leftwing
government”.
Lecornu
became the shortest-lived prime minister in modern French history when he
resigned, the country’s France’s fifth prime minister since Macron’s
re-election in 2022 and the third since the parliamentary dissolution of last
year.

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