Macron
working to strip far right of influence on next French government
The French
president is trying to limit the far-right National Rally’s influence and find
a way forward with the center left, but a path ahead remains elusive.
December 11,
2024 3:29 pm CET
By Victor
Goury-Laffont
https://www.politico.eu/article/france-emmanuel-macron-new-pm-national-rally-michel-barnier/
PARIS — Fool
me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me.
Emmanuel
Macron told leaders from across the political spectrum he will not appoint a
new prime minister whose survival depends on the far-right National Rally after
it spurned Michel Barnier and voted to bring down his government after just
three months, according to the French president’s office.
Toppling
Barnier, Macron told his ministers on Wednesday, “was a serious choice, a
choice that will have consequences,” government spokesperson Maud Bregeon told
reporters.
Macron is
expected to name a new premier by the end of the day Thursday to replace
Barnier. Several names have been floated in the French press, but the leading
rumor suggests he may appoint one of his earliest supporters, centrist François
Bayrou. However, representatives from different left-wing parties have already
made clear that they are against Bayrou’s potential appointment.
To avoid
having Bayrou or whoever becomes the next prime minister toppled within 90
days, Macron on Tuesday hosted all political forces represented in parliament
at the Elysée except for the National Rally and the left-wing France Unbowed —
which has vowed to try to take down any government not led by the left — to
discuss a path forward.
The meeting
produced two key points of agreement: that a government should not rely on Le
Pen, and that there would be no German-style broad government coalition
including opposing parties.
The first
option would be effectively repeating the mistake that doomed Barnier’s
minority government and required it to rely on tacit support from Le Pen’s
troops. The National Rally enjoyed an unprecedented level of power and
influence under the arrangement, but it fell out with Barnier amid a dispute
over budget cuts and tax raises aimed at bringing down France’s massive
deficit.
Tuesday’s
meeting, however, did not provide a clear path out of the deadlock. Leftist
parties remain adamant that the next prime minister should come from their
ranks after they banded together to come in first place during the summer’s
snap election, even if they fell short of an absolute majority.
Macron has
resisted naming a prime minister from the left and appears unlikely to do so.
In an effort to reach a compromise, the Greens and Socialists have publicly
pledged that their minority government would not use Article 49.3, a
constitutional mechanism which allows the government to push through
legislation without a vote but in turn allows lawmakers to put forward
no-confidence motions.
Barnier’s
government was ousted after trying to use 49.3 to pass a slimmed-down social
security budget for 2025.
What it’ll
take
Several
representatives at Tuesday’s Elysée meeting told POLITICO that they believe a
compromise such as Macron appointing a prime minister from his ranks who vowed
not to use 49.3 could win over the center left.
Socialist
leader Olivier Faure avoided directly addressing this possibility in a
Wednesday interview with BFMTV. Instead, he reiterated that a left-led
government would refrain from using 49.3 and called in turn on the opposition
to act “responsibly” by not forcing its collapse.
Somewhat
surprisingly, Macron also told party heads that he hopes not to call for new
legislative elections before the scheduled end of his presidential term in 2027
and will try to find a path on which the fractured legislature can at least
agree on a method to avoid having prime ministers removed every few months.
Although
Macron cannot call for new elections before summer 2025, it was widely expected
that he might do so then to break the deadlock within the legislature.
Sarah
Paillou contributed to this report.
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