Marine Le
Pen might be about to wreck the eurozone
France’s
far-right presidential hopeful is threatening to cause economic and political
turmoil by toppling Michel Barnier’s young government.
Marine Le
Pen could be about to trigger a Greece-style eurozone crisis as she decides
whether to bring down France’s fledging government. |
November 26,
2024 4:15 am CET
By Giorgio
Leali
PARIS —
Marine Le Pen could be about to trigger a Greece-style eurozone crisis as she
decides whether to bring down France’s fledging government.
As the
European Union faces up to political and economic turmoil — with the bloc’s
most recent national election giving a hard-right Russia fan the highest vote
share; Germany battered by a string of massive job losses; and leaders flailing
over how to deal with another Donald Trump presidency — the French firebrand
might be about to set the whole thing alight.
The
far-right politician and her National Rally party are weighing whether to vote
against Prime Minister Michel Barnier’s budget, which would not only pull the
plug on his fragile coalition government that has been in place less than three
months, but also terrify financial markets and send shockwaves around Europe.
“If the
budget remains as it is, we’ll vote for no confidence,” Le Pen said after
meeting Barnier for over an hour Monday morning. “If the government collapses,
the president of the Republic will have to choose a new prime minister.”
Barnier’s
centrist-conservative minority government, formed after President Emmanuel
Macron unexpectedly called an election in June that fractured parliament into
three left-wing, centrist and far-right blocs, has prioritized sorting out the
country’s disastrous public finances. Years of lavish spending have brought
France’s deficit — the difference between how much it spends and how much it
receives in taxes — to more than 6 percent of the entire economy, twice as much
as permitted by EU rules.
So far, Le
Pen has resisted torpedoing the coalition. But she has always said she would
vote down the budget if she didn’t like it.
And she
hates it. So does her rival left-wing group.
With debates
about it in parliament coming to an end, together they have enough troops to
collapse Barnier’s government and plunge the country into a new phase of
political chaos.
“Marine Le
Pen’s position is irresponsible,” said former Prime Minister Gabriel Attal, a
Macron ally. “You can’t play heads or tails with the country’s future.”
Feeling the
heat
But we’re
not just talking about France.
“If tomorrow
the government collapses over the budget, there will immediately be a financial
crisis,” Interior Minister Bruno
Retailleau warned. “Don’t think that France is shielded.”
A decade
ago, huge public debt in Greece almost toppled the single-currency eurozone. It
exposed how crises couldn’t be contained in a single country, and it didn’t
take much for the economies and banking systems of Portugal, Ireland and Spain
to start teetering. Even big nations like France and Italy, so important to the
health of the bloc, felt the heat.
But back
then, Germany was strong under its chancellor, Angela Merkel. It could afford
to bail out struggling allies and had the political capital to steady the ship.
That’s now no longer the case, with the German economy in disarray and its
government beleaguered.
Volkswagen,
Europe’s largest carmaker, has announced the first plant closures in its
history, which could result in 30,000 jobs lost after a 42 percent drop in
quarterly profits. Steelmaker ThyssenKrupp also announced on Monday it could
shed up to 11,000 jobs by 2030. Thousands more are set to go at Bosch and Ford.
The European
Central Bank warned last week that the bloc could be on the brink of a new
eurozone debt crisis because of low growth and policy uncertainty.
Embezzlement
trial
Le Pen, who
is preparing to run for French president in 2027, has criticized Barnier’s
budget, which is aimed at saving €60 billion, for its planned higher taxes on
electricity, and its proposed delay to the inflation adjustment for pensions.
She has also railed against its failure to cut spending on bureaucracy and
medical aid for migrants.
The budget
showdown comes as the nationalist leader awaits a court decision on the
embezzlement charges she faces. Le Pen, along with her party — the National
Rally — and 26 other individuals are on trial for having allegedly embezzled
funds from the European Parliament to pay party employees. All those accused
have denied the charges.
Le Pen’s
decision on the budget will be watched closely by financial markets, which can
often dictate the course of action that governments take. The markets have
calmed since a bout of worry after Macron initially called the election, but
investors remain tense with France now deemed a worse credit risk than Portugal
or Spain.
The moment
of truth will come right before Christmas, when Barnier will have to use a
constitutional trick to pass his budget. The gambit will allow him to pass a
text without a parliamentary vote, but will also expose him to a no-confidence
vote that could cost him his job.
And that’s
when Marine Le Pen might strike.
'Everything
can explode'
Barnier
already warned that the eurozone’s economic stability is at stake in France's
budget talks.
“We have to
respect eurozone rules because, otherwise when one of the countries doesn't
respect it — we saw what happened with
Greece — everything can explode,” he
said on Friday at an event organized by French business lobby Medef in Paris.
“If tomorrow
the government collapses over the budget, there will immediately be a financial
crisis,” Interior Minister Bruno
Retailleau warned. |
In a note
last week, rating agency Moody’s expressed “doubt about the ability of [French]
institutions to deliver policy outcomes”
and “expect [Paris’] debt burden to continue increasing.”
“The arrival
of Barnier and the budget he proposed re-assured markets to a certain extent,”
said Andreas Eisl, an economist at the Jacques Delors Institute, adding that
“markets will react strongly if a different government will propose a strong
departure from Barnier’s course.”
The European
Commission on Tuesday is expected to approve the multi-year spending plan
submitted by Barnier's government and to outline a list of reforms. If France
follows the Commission's reform recommendations, it will be granted an
extension from four to seven years to bring down its deficit.
Whether Le
Pen has something to gain by killing Barnier’s government is still an open
question.
While Le Pen
is facing increasing pressure from her voters to take action, making the
government collapse would be a political risk. However, an increasing number of
French people, especially Le Pen voters, are changing their minds and want
Barnier’s government to collapse, according to a recent poll by Elabe.
Public
opinion at large is divided about whether Barnier should go, according to the
survey.
Even Barnier
is cautious.
Asked
whether he will still be prime minister for Christmas, he said “it is a bit
early“ to say.
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