Marine Le
Pen smells blood as Macron runs out of options
The
far-right National Rally is pushing for new elections.
October
6, 2025 5:37 pm CET
By Marion
Solletty
https://www.politico.eu/article/marine-le-pen-smells-blood-emmanuel-macron-runs-out-of-options/
PARIS —
Marine Le Pen has already helped topple two French governments in less than a
year. She didn’t even need to pull the trigger to kill off a third one.
The
far-right leader was bullish on Monday after President Emmanuel Macron and his
allies failed in their latest attempt to form a government that could haul
France out of its political and economic crisis. His centrist liberals are now
in utter disarray and Le Pen’s top lieutenants in the National Rally are
shifting into election campaign mode.
“We are
ready to govern,” National Rally President Jordan Bardella said outside the
party’s headquarters as he walked out of a high-level meeting with Le Pen,
re-upping calls for Macron to call for a new parliamentary election
immediately.
The
president is more isolated than ever after his longtime ally, outgoing Prime
Minister Sébastien Lecornu, resigned on Monday morning after announcing a new
government the previous evening.
“I am
calling on him to dissolve the National Assembly. We are at the end of the
road,” Le Pen hammered. “The joke is over, the farce has gone on long enough …
By irrationally fighting institutions, Emmanuel Macron is putting the country
in a terribly complicated situation.”
Top
advisers to both Le Pen and Bardella were summoned to the party’s headquarters
on the outskirts of Paris to hash out next steps Monday morning after Lecornu
announced his resignation. Cat lover Le Pen took a kitten in its travel cage to
the crunch meeting.
The
appointment of Lecornu represented Macron’s third attempt to find a way out of
a crisis born out of his ill-fated call for a snap election last year, which
resulted in a hung parliament where Macron’s centrists and its allies control
only roughly a third of the seats.
The left
and the far right control the remaining two thirds but are pulling in
politically opposite directions, nipping in the bud every successive
government’s attempt at breaking the deadlock amid a spiraling budget crisis.
“We are
now waiting for a dissolution,” one of Le Pen’s top advisers, who was granted
anonymity as he is not authorized to speak publicly, said after the meeting.
Another
official said the meeting was used to discuss and fine tune messaging around
the party’s platform ahead of potential snap elections.
A
National Rally MEP who took part in a parallel, planned meeting about election
preparations said discussions in the party now focused on gearing up for
campaigning.
“We are
looking at the last [unattributed] constituencies, meetings, posters … [up to]
paper order,” she said.
Eric
Ciotti, the head of a small right-wing party allied with Le Pen, said his
lawmakers and those of the National Rally had unanimously decided to try to
topple any future prime minister if Macron tried to put someone forward before
new elections.
“We will
immediately censure any new government,” he said.
National
Rally’s ‘prophecy’
Polling
consistently puts the National Rally way ahead of other political parties with
around 33 to 34 percent of the vote in a possible legislative election.
Macron’s party is trailing third, with half that voting share. Leftist
candidates are polling second.
Macron is
likely to explore all alternatives before calling for another election. This
includes potentially naming yet another prime minister, but this time hailing
from the left. The far right, however, is betting that the pressure for a
return to the ballot box will prove too high.
An
election would present a personal challenge for Le Pen, as she is currently
subject to a five-year election ban as a result of an embezzlement conviction
earlier this year. But the far-right leader has been adamant she won’t let her
personal situation weigh in on her leadership decisions.
Top
advisers to the party are also preparing their troops for intense scrutiny over
any campaign, including by ironing out possible internal divisions. The party’s
line on economic policy has been a sore point, with some of the party’s old
guard sticking to Le Pen’s protectionist agenda aimed at the working class
while others favored a more free market approach championed by Bardella.
“There
were words on TV that weren’t exactly in line,” a top adviser to Le Pen said,
referring to mixed signals sent by MPs on fiscal issues, including a tax on
capital gains.
Asked
whether the latest development was a golden opportunity for his party, MP
Jean-Philippe Tanguy, one of Le Pen’s most faithful lawmakers, said: “Seeing
our country in angst is not a golden opportunity, it is the realization of a
prophecy.”
The
party’s rank-and-file echoed their leaders’ regular attacks on mainstream
political parties, whom they accuse of leading the country toward the abyss.
Le Pen on
Monday also blamed the conservative Les Républicains, who were part of the
outgoing government, and the Socialists, who have been negotiating with the
government on the 2026 budget, for the chaos, slamming “two political forces
who are destroying their own credibility.”
The
National Rally’s seemingly unstoppable march to power comes as the far right
scores points across the continent, sending ripples through the European Union.
Bardella,
who has been molded for the prime minister job should the National Rally win an
absolute majority in future parliamentary elections, defiantly linked his surge
at national level to his ability to upend the traditional EU order too. Shortly
after meeting Le Pen, he headed to Strasbourg to vote in a motion of no
confidence targeting European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, a
Macron ally.
“France
is in the process of freeing itself from Macronism; it is time to break with
Macron’s Europe as well,” Bardella posted on X.
Sarah
Paillou contributed reporting to this story.

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