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Key Points
  • French parliament ousted Prime Minister Francois Bayrou, rejecting his deficit plan.
  • President Emmanuel Macron is resisting calls for snap elections.
  • The next government’s most pressing task will be to pass a budget and solve France’s mounting debt crisis.
France’s parliament has brought down the government over its plans to tame the ballooning national debt, deepening a political crisis that is weakening the euro zone’s second-largest economy.
Politicians voted to oust Prime Minister Francois Bayrou and his minority government with 364 votes against the veteran centrist politician and 194 in his favour.
President Emmanuel Macron, who is facing calls from the opposition to dissolve parliament and resign, will instead hunt for his fifth prime minister in less than two years. His office said he would appoint one in the next few days.
The next government’s most pressing task will be to pass a budget, the same challenge Francois Bayrou faced when he took office nine months ago. Securing the backing of a very divided parliament will be equally hard.

“You have the power to bring down the government, but you do not have the power to erase reality,” Bayrou told the parliament before losing the confidence vote.

“Reality will remain relentless: expenses will continue to rise, and the burden of debt, already unbearable, will grow heavier and more costly,” he said.
Bayrou will tender his resignation on Tuesday local time, his office said.
He had called the confidence vote to try to win parliamentary support for his strategy to lower a deficit that stands at nearly double the European Union’s three per cent ceiling, and to start tackling a debt pile equivalent to 114 per cent of GDP.
But opposition parties were in little mood to rally behind his planned savings of €44 billion ($78.5 billion) in next year’s budget, with an election for Macron’s successor looming in 2027.
“This moment marks the end of the agony of a phantom government,” far-right leader Marine Le Pen said, pushing for a snap parliamentary election, which Macron has so far ruled out.

“Macron is now on the front line facing the people. He too must go,” Jean-Luc Melenchon, leader of the hard-left France Unbowed, said on X.

Who could be France’s next prime minister?

A lengthy period of political and fiscal uncertainty risks undermining Macron’s influence in Europe at a time when the United States is talking tough on trade and security, and war is raging in Ukraine on Europe’s eastern flank.
The French president could now nominate a politician from his own centrist minority ruling group or from the ranks of conservatives as the next premier, but that would mean doubling down on a strategy that has failed to yield a stable alliance.

He also could tack to the left and nominate a moderate socialist, or choose a technocrat.

No scenario would be likely to hand the next government a parliamentary majority. It was inevitable that the need to form a new government would result in a dilution of the deficit reduction plan, finance minister Eric Lombard said before the vote.
Macron may eventually decide the only path out of the crisis lies in calling a snap election, but he has so far resisted calls from Le Pen’s National Rally and from France Unbowed to dissolve parliament a second time.

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