French President Emmanuel Macron pressed to end political 'mess' after the resignation of his latest PM

Dominique Vidalon and Sudip Kar-Gupta
Reuters
French President Emmanuel Macron desperately needs a circuit breaker amid growing political chaos.(AP PHOTO)
French President Emmanuel Macron desperately needs a circuit breaker amid growing political chaos.(AP PHOTO) Credit: AAP

France’s President Emmanuel Macron faces growing pressure to resign or hold a snap parliamentary election to end political chaos that has forced the resignation of five prime ministers in less than two years.

The 47-year-old centrist President has repeatedly said he will see out his second term, which ends in 2027.

But resignation calls, long confined to the fringes, have entered the mainstream during one of the worst political crises since the 1958 creation of the Fifth Republic, France’s current system of Government.

Sign up to The Nightly's newsletters.

Get the first look at the digital newspaper, curated daily stories and breaking headlines delivered to your inbox.

Email Us
By continuing you agree to our Terms and Privacy Policy.

On Tuesday, as Mr Macron’s outgoing Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu held last-ditch talks to form a new Government, his first premier in 2017, Edouard Philippe, said it was time for a new president to break the deadlock.

Speaking to RTL radio, Mr Philippe said Mr Macron should be “leaving in an orderly manner” to allow a way out of the crisis.

Political turmoil in the euro zone’s second-largest economy was front page news across Europe at a time when US President Donald Trump is demanding the continent do more to shore up its own defences and aid Ukraine.

Markets have taken fright, with investors keeping a close eye on France’s ability to cut a yawning budget deficit.

French stocks fell 1.4 per cent on Monday and the risk premium on French Government bond yields rose to a nine-month high on the crisis.

“It’s a mess. It makes you sad,” said Brigitte Gries, a 70-year-old pensioner in Paris, summing up public consternation.

“We’re becoming a bit of a laughing stock around the world right now,” added taxi driver Soufiane Mansour in the southern city of Montpellier.

“We’re a bit of a clown around the world and in Europe, unfortunately.”

Mr Philippe, whom polls show to be the best-placed candidate to lead the political centre in a succession battle, was the second of Mr Macron’s former prime ministers to distance themselves from him in as many days.

Gabriel Attal, another erstwhile Macron loyalist, was blunt in his criticism.

He was Prime Minister for a few months last year before Mr Macron called a snap vote that delivered a hung parliament with three ideologically opposed blocs.

“Like many French people, I no longer understand the president’s decisions,” he said on TF1 TV, after Mr Macron asked Mr Lecornu, who had just tendered his resignation, to go back to opponents for last-gasp talks.

In an interview published in Le Parisien newspaper late on Tuesday, Elisabeth Borne, another former Macron premier and the current caretaker Education Minister, said she was open to suspending the pension overhaul she had steered through parliament.

The left has called for the 2023 bill to be scrapped.

Mr Lecornu, whose 14-hour-old administration was the shortest in modern French history, was given two days to find consensus.

Mr Attal, however, ruled out calling for Mr Macron to resign, someone who took part in a meeting of his parliamentary group said.

Meanwhile, Mr Lecornu held talks with leaders of Mr Macron’s centrist alliance and conservatives, in which they agreed that finding a deal on next year’s budget was a priority.

He will need others, including the Socialists, on board to have the numbers needed to form a majority in the National Assembly - not least to pass a budget for next year.

Mr Lecornu now plans to talk with the opposition in the afternoon and on Wednesday morning, but the far-right National Rally said they saw no point in those talks and would skip them.

Party chiefs Jordan Bardella and Marine Le Pen instead “reiterate their call for the dissolution of the National Assembly,” the RN said.

The RN tops opinion polls, but those surveys show a repeat election would likely produce another divided parliament, with no group holding a majority.

Comments

Latest Edition

The Nightly cover for 07-10-2025

Latest Edition

Edition Edition 7 October 20257 October 2025

Vile vandalism glorifying Hamas butchers and the Oct 7 massacre on open display in inner city Melbourne. How did Australia get here?