Macron to
name new PM in next 48 hours
The
Elysée’s statement comes after consultations with the current prime minister on
the crisis that has engulfed France.
October
8, 2025 8:55 pm CET
By Victor
Goury-Laffont and Giorgio Leali
https://www.politico.eu/article/sebastien-lecornu-france-prime-minister-french-political-crisis/
PARIS —
French President Emmanuel Macron will name a new prime minister within the next
48 hours, his office said Wednesday.
The news
of a potential new head of government comes after Macron tapped outgoing French
Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu to chart a path forward by Wednesday evening
following the government’s shocking resignation on Monday a mere 14 hours after
being named.
Lecornu
said in a primetime interview Wednesday after meeting with Macron that he
believed a path forward “is still possible,” though he acknowledged it would be
“difficult.” Lecornu did not explicitly say that a viable solution had been
found to the crisis currently engulfing France.
Macron’s
office said Lecornu had presented three conclusions: A majority of lawmakers
are against holding snap elections; a “platform of stability” exists, although
the Elysée did not elaborate on what that meant; and a path forward exists to
adopt a budget before the end of the year.
In his
interview, Lecornu said that a “narrow plurality” is ready to find common
ground on a budget for 2026, which he previously said must significantly rein
in a budget deficit projected to come in at 5.4 percent of gross domestic
product this year. The PM had earlier Wednesday signaled the possibility of
softening France’s deficit reduction to 5 percent of GDP from 4.7 percent, the
figure Lecornu initially put forward.
What
comes next is entirely up to Macron.
If he
chooses not to dissolve the National Assembly, Macron will need to pick a new
prime minister who will face the same challenge that doomed Lecornu’s two
predecessors: passing a budget without a majority in parliament.
The
president could opt for a center-left politician from the Socialist Party, who
would then need to work with other left-wing lawmakers as well as centrists to
form a majority.
But this
would likely come at a cost for Macron, who would see some of his landmark
policies — including a law that raised the minimum retirement age for most
workers — come under attack from a left-wing government.
However,
the Socialists emerged from a meeting with Lecornu on Wednesday with neither an
agreement nor any assurances regarding their demand to revisit pension reform.
“It is
one of the most obstructive, most difficult issues,” Lecornu said, adding that
a debate on pension reform was inevitable and would resurface ahead of the 2027
presidential election if it wasn’t addressed earlier.
Momentum
to suspend the reform, which remains unpopular, has grown in recent days.
Former Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne — who rammed the legislation through in
the face of fierce opposition — said she was now in favor of suspending the
law.
Macron
himself has remained silent.
He is
expected to speak Thursday when former Justice Minister Robert Badinter, who
led the charge in France to eliminate the death penalty in 1981, is enshrined
in the Pantheon, but it’s unlikely he will address the fact that he has cycled
through three prime ministers in less than a year.
Meanwhile,
calls for new elections continue to grow louder from the far right.
Far-right
leader Marine Le Pen said Wednesday that her party, the National Rally, would
vote to topple any future PM named before new elections.
“The joke
has gone on for long enough. No one’s laughing anymore,” said Le Pen’s protégé
and party president, Jordan Bardella. “Macron is looking to win time. He’s
trying to keep his camp in power at all cost.”
This
story has been updated.

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