• PM Barnier resigned after no-confidence vote in parliament
  • Macron’s standing weakened amid calls for his resignation
  • France faces political uncertainty, unnerving markets
  • Macron says he will stay until the end of his mandate

PARIS, Dec 5 (Reuters) - French President Emmanuel Macron will appoint a new prime minister in the coming days whose top priority will be getting a 2025 budget adopted by parliament, he said on Thursday after the government was toppled by lawmakers.

Michel Barnier, a veteran conservative, became the shortest-serving prime minister in modern French history when he resigned on Thursday after parliament voted him out over his fiscal plans, barely three months after he was appointed.

In a televised address to the nation, Macron said he would name a successor to Barnier “in the coming days.”

“The priority will be the budget,” Macron said.

A special law to roll over the 2024 budget and avoid any gap will be put forward by mid-December. Then the new government will prepare a full budget early next year, in particular to account for inflation, for a vote by parliament.

Macron, whose ill-fated decision to call a snap ballot in June delivered a much-divided parliament, denied he was responsible for the political crisis.

The president, who represents a centrist party, said the far-right and left-wing parties united in an “anti-republican front” to create “a mess” by ousting Barnier.

Macron has been weakened by the crisis but resisted calls by some in the opposition for him to resign. He reaffirmed that he will stay in office until his term ends in May 2027.

  • Synapse@lemmy.world
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    20 days ago

    It always make me cringe want they call Macron “centrist” want he is the personification of ultra-liberalism and he has never proposed anything even remotely social.

    It makes me very angry when he constantly tries to present the left of LFI and the fascists from RN as the same thing.

    • BestBouclettes@jlai.lu
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      20 days ago

      He is a centrist though, an extreme centrist even. He stands alone in the middle, with no real convictions, and is just opportunistic when it comes to political choices.

      • Synapse@lemmy.world
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        20 days ago

        He is willing to make deals with RN though. But never ever he will accept to tax the ultra-wealthy.

        • WhatAmLemmy@lemmy.world
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          20 days ago

          So he’s the classic centrist, and by that I mean a criminally corrupt neoliberal/conservative corporate whore scab, with no ethics or morals; guided by nothing but what he believes will benefit him personally…

    • agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works
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      20 days ago

      Liberalism is centrist. That’s not an endorsement of liberalism, it’s a recognition of where the ends of the popular political spectrum lie.

      • Synapse@lemmy.world
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        20 days ago

        He is willing to cut deals with the extreme right, but never with the left. That’s not quite the center, is it ?

      • Uruanna@lemmy.world
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        20 days ago

        Liberalism is right wing. We’re talking European liberalism here which is economic liberalism, and that always pushes to the right by protecting economy over people. Macron and his party literally chose Nazis over left wing, even when they keep pretending that the left (which he keeps calling the far left) is just as bad as the far right. Pushing the Overton shift.