Macron
should step down, his former PM says
Edouard
Philippe is the latest ally to break ranks with the French president.
October
7, 2025 10:50 am CET
By Victor
Goury-Laffont
https://www.politico.eu/article/france-emmanuel-macron-should-resign-ex-pm-edouard-philippe-says/
PARIS —
Former French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe said Tuesday that President
Emmanuel Macron should resign before the end of his term due to France’s
deepening political crisis.
“I’m not
for an immediate and brutal resignation … but [the president] must take an
initiative,” Philippe said on French radio station RTL.
Philippe,
Macron’s first prime minister who served from 2017 to 2020, said his former
boss should “announce that he will organize an early presidential election”
once France passes a budget for next year — allowing time for a proper campaign
in the aftermath of the chaos triggered by the government’s resignation Monday
just 14 hours after key ministers were named. It was the third government to
collapse in a year.
Philippe
has already announced his intention to run in the next presidential election,
and polling shows he could make the runoff and face whichever candidate from
the far-right National Rally stands in the contest.
If Macron
were to resign immediately, a new presidential election would have to be held
within 20 to 35 days. His term is currently scheduled to end in the first half
of 2027.
According
to one centrist politician, who was granted anonymity to speak candidly,
Philippe was under growing pressure from within his own party, Horizons, which
he founded in 2021 and has worked with Macron. Several allies were urging
Philippe to seize the moment to clearly distance himself from Macron.
Philippe’s
remarks are the latest indication that Macron’s allies from the political
center are abandoning ship after Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu and his two
immediate predecessors, François Bayrou and Michel Barnier, all lost their jobs
trying to get a hung parliament to agree to billions in spending cuts needed to
balance France’s books.
Another
of Macron’s former prime ministers, Gabriel Attal — who now serves as the head
of the president’s political party — said he “no longer understands” the
president’s decisions and accused him of “wanting to hold onto power” despite
having lost the snap elections he himself called last year.
After
accepting Lecornu’s resignation, Macron then asked him anyway to continue
negotiations with other political forces until Wednesday in the hope of
reaching a governing agreement.
A survey
by respected pollster Elabe released Monday showed that 51 percent of
respondents believe Macron’s resignation would help ease the political
situation in France, while 26 percent said it would make things worse and 23
percent expressed no opinion.
Anthony
Lattier contributed to this report.

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