France
passes budget after months of wrangling and no-confidence motions
PM
Sébastien Lecornu pushes budget through using constitutional powers that
avoided vote in parliament
Angelique
Chrisafis in Paris
Mon 2 Feb
2026 20.43 CET
France
has finally passed a budget for this year after the minority government
survived a series of no-confidence votes in a long-running political saga that
has unsettled debt markets and alarmed the country’s European partners.
The prime
minister, Sébastien Lecornu, told parliament on Monday, after months of
wrangling, that French people “refuse this disorder and want our institutions
to function”.
The
budget was passed using special constitutional powers that avoided it being
submitted to parliament for a vote. But as part of that process, Lecornu and
his government faced a series of no-confidence motions. The government survived
the final two votes of no confidence on Monday evening.
Lecornu
managed to push the budget through only because the Socialist party agreed not
to vote against the government, in exchange for some concessions including the
suspension of Macron’s flagship pension changes, which had sought to gradually
raise the retirement age from 62 to 64.
Hervé
Saulignac, a Socialist MP, told parliament that his party had “done its duty”
and “avoided the worst”. He said leaving France without a budget would have
been to “add more anguish to the anguish” of the French people.
Lecornu
had called the budget a “breakthrough”, saying it would boost defence spending
by €6.5bn. Although some lawmakers have expressed doubts, the budget aims to
bring the deficit down to 5% of the gross domestic product in 2026, from 5.4%
in 2025. The French executive was initially targeting 4.6%, but the scrapping
of pension changes meant such a reduction of the deficit was not possible,
according to the rightwing rapporteur Philippe Juvin.
Budget
negotiations have consumed the French political class for almost two years
after the president, Emmanuel Macron, sparked incredulity by calling a snap
election in June 2024, which delivered a hung parliament. A left alliance won
the most seats, but fell far short of a majority. The far-right National Rally
party won the most votes and became a force to be reckoned with, but did not
have a majority. Macron’s centrist grouping lost seats but were still present.
Domestic
politics has been largely deadlocked since then, leading to a period of
instability and government collapses in Europe’s second largest economy.
Macron at
first appointed the rightwing Michel Barnier prime minister in 2024, who was
brought down by parliament only three months later amid a row over the 2025
budget. Then the centrist François Bayrou lasted only nine months before he too
was ousted over the proposed 2026 budget. Lecornu, a key Macron ally, was
appointed last autumn, before resigning and being reappointed to try to get a
budget passed.
Lecornu
would like to stay in office until 2027, without being ousted. His fragile
government is seeking to move beyond the budget on to issues such as a law to
protect farmers, and a bill on assisted dying and improved palliative care. But
the deadlock in parliament has limited the government’s ability to act on
domestic policies.
Municipal
elections take place across France next month. The presidential election of
spring 2027 is now the key focus of national politics.
Macron,
who cannot stand again for office after two terms as president, is now working
almost entirely on foreign policy, pushing Europe to be less dependent on
foreign powers, and advocating a harder line in confronting the US president,
Donald Trump, over tariffs or the Greenland crisis.
The
far-right leader Marine Le Pen, who was considered to be one of the contenders
for the 2027 presidential election, is currently attending a retrial on appeal
over the embezzlement of European parliament funds through an alleged fake jobs
scam. She was found guilty last year and banned from running for office for
five years, but is seeking to overturn that verdict and sentence.

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