Why
Macron’s meltdown weakens Europe
Investors
and governments have no idea what the French president will do to tackle a
budget deficit and political crisis. That uncertainty is freaking them
out.
In
Brussels and other European capitals, officials and diplomats voiced their
private fears that President Emmanuel Macron’s leadership on international
issues such as Ukraine and Gaza will be fatally weakened. |
October
7, 2025 4:01 am CET
By Tim
Ross and Giorgio Leali
https://www.politico.eu/article/france-political-crisis-emmanuel-macron-sebastien-lecornu-europe/
PARIS —
Europe was already facing a toxic cocktail of Vladimir Putin’s war in Ukraine,
Donald Trump’s assault on global trade and the rise of far-right populists
across the region.
Then the
French government collapsed yet again — this time having lasted less than a day
in office — spooking markets with the prospect of a fresh election that could
bring the far right closer to power than ever.
In
Brussels and other European capitals, officials and diplomats voiced their
private fears that President Emmanuel Macron’s leadership on international
issues such as Ukraine and Gaza will be fatally weakened. Some worried that the
entire eurozone economy may soon be in peril as a result.
“France
is too big to fail, so this endless political instability puts the entire
eurozone at risk,” said one diplomat from an EU country, who like others in
this article was granted anonymity to comment on another country’s domestic
situation. “It is the main subject at all the water cooler conversations
today.”
With good
reason. France is the European Union’s second-biggest economy, a leading player
in the G7, the EU’s only nuclear power and a permanent member of the U.N.
Security Council. Just as significantly, under Macron it has been a political
force driving EU affairs rivaled only by the might of Germany.
At the
same time, Macron has been trying to fend off the threat of the far-right
National Rally, which consistently leads in opinion polls, while tackling
France’s large budget deficit.
But his
governments have been unable to pass measures to rein in public spending
through parliament. A prolonged political stalemate increasingly raises the
likelihood of new legislative elections before the end of the year, bringing
additional months of uncertainty.
Some
observers are now even contemplating Macron’s early resignation as president.
His term is due to end in 2027.
Each of
these outcomes would open the door for Marine Le Pen’s far-right National Rally
party to make major gains, potentially upending European politics and
unleashing a wave of instability. Chief among the concerns raised by EU
diplomats and officials in national capitals was the risk to the eurozone.
Bad
trading
On
Monday, traders in markets in France and beyond reacted with alarm to the
dramatic unraveling of Sébastien Lecornu’s 14-hour-old administration. French
stocks and government bonds fell, and the euro itself weakened against the
dollar. France’s benchmark CAC 40 index dropped 1.4 per cent.
“There
are already many concerns around the eurozone economy,” said one government
official from a eurozone country. “We really don’t need this.”
Internally,
French officials sought to play down the risks. One said that despite the
“complexity” there is still “a pilot in the cockpit” at the economy ministry
and that the markets shouldn’t overreact. Not everyone is convinced.
“The
efforts of President Macron over the past eight years [has been to say] France
is the most attractive place in Europe to invest,” said Grégoire Roos, program
director for Europe and Russia at the Chatham House think tank in London.
“I don’t
see any significant international investor choosing France at the moment given
the absolute lack of political clarity and also fiscal clarity.”
Political
obituaries
In
Brussels, some EU diplomats are already privately writing Macron’s political
obituary. Having shot to power in 2017 and broken the mold of French politics,
they said, he now appears a lame-duck leader whose influence in Brussels is
fading fast.
A second
EU diplomat spoke of Macron’s “legacy” as a powerful thinker who had generated
many ideas to drive change in Europe, and who had persuaded other leaders to
embrace some of them. The concept of “strategic autonomy” — making the EU more
self-sufficient economically and in defense — was born years ago in Paris, the
diplomat noted.
With
President Trump now pulling the U.S. away from Europe, it’s an idea that has
come of age in Brussels. “Not many leaders are willing and able to think five
or even two years ahead,” the diplomat said. “He was so good at doing that.”
Macron,
of course, was elected to be in office until 2027, and despite speculation has
given no indication he will resign. If he stays, however, the turmoil in Paris
means French influence on EU debates and policy development is likely to be
diminished.
Discussions
among finance ministers on the EU budget would be much easier for France to
shape, for example, if it could consistently send the same minister to meetings
with their counterparts in Brussels, the diplomat said. But the repeated
personnel shake-ups in Paris make it far harder for the French position to hold
sway.
An early
election, on the other hand, could imperil the EU’s next long-term budget.
National governments discussing the budget had set an informal deadline to get
a deal before the French election in 2027, given the danger that Le Pen might
politicize and ultimately derail the debate, said the eurozone government
official quoted above.
Missing
in action
Macron
has been central to European efforts to support Ukraine and the continent
itself against Russia, both by urging fellow leaders to do more to equip Europe
with its own military capabilities and by coordinating with allies.
His joint
initiative with U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer to assemble a “coalition of
the willing” remains the only game in town when it comes to supporting any
eventual peace deal in Ukraine. “It’s not good for the EU if one of the biggest
member states is in turmoil, especially in the current security situation,” the
same eurozone official said.
A
muscular “Franco-German engine” — with powerful leaders working together in
Paris and Berlin — is conventionally seen as essential to making the EU strong
and efficient. Macron’s travails make that far harder to achieve, even with a
new leader in Germany in Friedrich Merz, who is seen in Brussels as far more
dynamic than his predecessor.
A French
official from the cabinet of an outgoing minister acknowledged the problem.
“This leaves France absent at a time when Russia is making incursions into
European territories, [when] China has incredible industrial overcapacity, and
[when] Trump’s United States continues to do silly things,” the person said. “I
think France’s leadership will be missing. It’s impossible for France to give
what France has to give under these conditions.”
Then
there’s the question of what, or who, comes next. If Macron does trigger new
elections, the French far right stands to gain, although the RN’s poll share
has remained broadly stable at around 30 percent to 32 percent since the 2024
legislative elections.
Europe’s
far right has been emboldened by Macron’s struggles, even before Monday’s
government collapse. Le Pen, the godmother of the National Rally, celebrated
the victory of rightist-populist Andrej Babiš in last weekend’s election in the
Czech Republic — and used Monday’s crisis to reiterate her calls for a new
election.
Geert
Wilders, the veteran far-right Dutch firebrand who won the most seats in the
last election in the Netherlands, had a warning for “all the old leaders,”
including Macron, earlier this year: “Your time is over.”
Sarah
Paillou contributed reporting.

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário