Le Pen
slams France’s ‘unjust’ budget as markets brace for government collapse
Far-right
leader Marine Le Pen slammed the planned French budget as “bad, unjust and
violent.”
November 27,
2024 2:44 pm CET
By Giorgio
Leali
https://www.politico.eu/article/france-far-right-michel-barnier-crying-wolf-government-collapse/
PARIS —
Marine Le Pen on Wednesday doubled down on her threat to topple the French
government if Prime Minister Michel Barnier resists some of her far-right
party’s demands on next year’s budget, which she slammed as “bad, unjust and
violent.”
Le Pen’s
comments came as financial markets took fright that the French budget dispute
could precipitate a eurozone-wide crisis, with the yield on France’s benchmark
10-year government bonds coming within a mere one-hundredth of a point of their
Greek counterparts. Additionally, the premium investors are demanding over the
comparable German bond is now higher than at any time since the depths of the
eurozone debt crisis in 2012, at 0.87 percentage points.
Hours
earlier, Le Pen’s party, the National Rally, held a press conference to push
back against accusations that that a government collapse would lead to a
Greek-style financial crisis or to a U.S.-style shutdown.
National
Rally heavyweight Jean-Philippe Tanguy accused Barnier of "crying
wolf" after he went on national television Tuesday evening to warn of
"serious turbulence on the financial markets" that could follow a
government collapse.
"Being
unable to ensure tax reforms based on justice and fair contributions for all,
Mr. Barnier is forced to brandish panic [and] the fear of chaos," Tanguy
retorted.
Tanguy said
that were the government to collapse, it will still be able to introduce
stopgap measures to ensure that the administration keeps functioning.
"We
commit to vote in favor of that law," Tanguy promised.
Barnier and
the National Rally are at odds over the conservative grandee's budget plans for
2025, which includes €60 billion in savings aimed at reducing the French
deficit. The deficit is projected to come in at 6.1 percent of gross domestic
product for 2024, more than double the European Union limit for overspending.
Since his
appointment in early September, Barnier has made clear that bringing down the
deficit would be his key priority — a promise that has calmed those in Brussels
worried about France's overspending since the pandemic. The European Commission
on Tuesday endorsed Barnier's plan to get France's finances in order.
Lawmakers
have been debating Barnier's budget for weeks, but with the end of the year
nearing it has become increasingly clear that the prime minister will need to
use a constitutional backdoor to pass it. The maneuver allows him to enact
legislation without a vote — but in turn allows lawmakers to put forward
motions of no confidence. An alliance of pan-left lawmakers has already
announced to bring one forward.
The National
Rally has, until recently offered tacit support to Barnier's minority
government, which is backed by a conservatives and centrists in a messy
marriage of convenience. Le Pen on Monday threatened to join the left's effort
to oust him over several demands related to the budget — including scrapping an
electricity tax hike and a proposal delay to the inflation adjustment for
pensions. The longtime party leader also wants to see the spending cuts on
medical aid for migrants.
"Simple
discussions are better than nothing, but they won't be enough," Le Pen
wrote in a cryptic post on X on Tuesday morning.
Speaking
later in the day, Tanguy, who is in charge of economic files for the National
Rally, said the party does not “take lightly” its decision to back a
no-confidence measure against Barnier — while maintaining his depiction of the
PM as the intransigent party.
Victor
Goury-Laffont contributed to this report.
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