Macron
reappoints Sébastien Lecornu as French prime minister
Lecornu,
who resigned as PM on Monday, is tasked with urgently delivering a budget to
parliament
Angelique
Chrisafis in Paris
Fri 10
Oct 2025 23.24 CEST
The
French president, Emmanuel Macron, has reappointed his centrist ally Sébastien
Lecornu as prime minister – days after Lecornu dramatically resigned and his
new government collapsed after only 14 hours.
Lecornu
said he accepted returning to the role “out of duty” and would do “everything
possible to provide France with a budget by the end of the year and to address
the daily life issues of our fellow citizens”.
He added:
“We must put an end to this political crisis that is exasperating the French
people and end this instability that is harming France’s image and its
interests.”
The
unprecedented move by Macron to reappoint Lecornu only days after officially
accepting his resignation comes amid worsening political crisis in France.
In
Macron’s centrist Renaissance party, the MP Shannon Seban said Lecornu’s return
was crucial to ensure “stability” for France. The outgoing centrist education
minister, Élisabeth Borne, said Lecornu could “build compromise for France”.
But it
was seen by opposition parties as a sign that Macron, who has 18 months left
until the end of his presidential term, refused to broaden the government to
other political views that reflected the divided parliament.
Lecornu
is now under pressure to quickly form a government of new faces with a range of
political views, but this is looking increasingly difficult.
Jordan
Bardella, president of Marine Le Pen’s far-right National Rally, wrote on
social media that Lecornu’s reappointment was a “bad joke”, a “shame on
democracy” and a “humiliation for the French people”. He said his party would
back a vote of no-confidence in Lecornu at the soonest opportunity.
Parties
on the left expressed surprise and criticism. The Socialist party said it had
made “no deal” not to join a no-confidence vote in Leconru. “Incredible,” wrote
the Green party leader, Marine Tondelier, of Lecornu’s appointment.
Macron is
facing the worst domestic crisis since he first won the presidency in 2017. On
Monday Lecornu dramatically resigned only 14 hours after he appointed a new
government. He quit after facing fierce criticism from opposition parties that
he was refusing to broaden the government to different political groups and
viewpoints that reflected France’s divided parliament.
He
resigned before he had even attended his first cabinet meeting or made his
first policy speech to parliament. Weeks earlier, his predecessor François
Bayrou was ousted over his proposed budget cuts.
Lecornu,
39, has previously served as defence minister and was known for his work on
increasing French military spending. Last month, he became the third French
prime minister in only one year as the country has lurched from one political
crisis to another since Macron’s gamble on an inconclusive snap election last
year.
The
parliament remains divided between the three blocs: the left, the far right and
the centre, with no clear majority. A budget for next year must be agreed
within weeks, even though the political parties are at loggerheads and there
has been no stable government for weeks.
The
reappointment of Lecornu came at the end of a day of high drama in which
several opposition parties were invited to the presidential palace for talks
with Macron and many left saying they had not felt listened to. One attender
said it was like “talking to a wall”.
Julien
Aubert, a vice-president of the right’s Les Républicains, which had until now
propped up Macron’s centrists in government, said: “Reappointing the same prime
minister after such a circus is a provocation – the messaging is terrible.”
Others
were more reconciliatory. Vincent Jeanbrun, the spokesperson for Les
Républicains in parliament, said: “Reappointing Lecornu gives a chance for
stability.”
Macron’s
approval ratings have dropped to a historic low. Alain Minc, an essayist and
commentator, told BFMTV Macron was now so unpopular, he was “politically
radioactive”.
Lecornu
must now attempt to appoint a government this weekend in time for a first
cabinet meeting on Monday, in order to begin the lengthy process of getting
parliamentary agreement on the 2026 budget.
France’s
central bank chief, François Villeroy de Galhau, forecasts that the political
uncertainty that France has seen in recent weeks would have an impact on
business, consumer confidence and economic growth. “Uncertainty is … the number
one enemy of growth,” he told RTL radio.
Under the
French political system, the president, who is head of state and has authority
on foreign policy and national security, directly appoints a prime minister as
head of government to run domestic affairs.

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