President of France Emmanuel Macron during a press conference after the end of the European Council Summit, at the EU headquarters in Brussels, Belgium.
Credit: Shutterstock, Nicolas Economou
French President Emmanuel Macron is in the fight of his political life, frantically wheeling and dealing with party leaders to replace his ousted Prime Minister Michel Barnier. The Élysée Palace has turned into a revolving door of frenzied negotiations as Macron desperately tries to patch up his fractured government.
In a clear jab at Marine Le Pen’s far-right Rassemblement National, Macron told the Greens on Monday, December 9, that he’s ruling out any deal with her party. The meeting, which included the Communists and independents, came just days after a no-confidence vote torpedoed Barnier’s government. This was the first time this had happened in over 60 years.
The shocking rebellion saw far-right and far-left MPs team up in a rare show of unity to reject Barnier’s austerity budget, plunging France, and potentially Europe, into political chaos.
Pressure is mounting on the embattled president to pick a new PM – fast. Yaël Braun-Pivet, the president of the Assemblée Nationale, has told him to stop dithering and strike a deal with the right-wing Les Républicains, independents, and the Socialists. This would give him a majority.
Even Macron’s allies are getting impatient. Centrist leader François Bayrou has thrown his hat into the ring as a potential PM, assuring that if he can help, ‘he will’. But the left isn’t impressed. Green Party boss Marine Tondelier dismissed Bayrou’s ambitions, saying, he wasn’t ‘compatible with the left.’
The left-wing Nouveau Front Populaire (NFP)- a powerful alliance of Socialists, Greens, and hard-left MPs – has demanded that Macron pick a PM from their ranks. But Macron, ever the political juggler, is reportedly hoping to drive a wedge between the Socialists and their far-left allies in La France Insoumise (LFI).
Socialist leader Olivier Faure has signalled he’s open to talks with Macron, but LFI’s fiery leader, Jean-Luc Mélenchon, is having none of it. According to him, ‘the Socialists have no mandate to negotiate.‘ His party refused to attend Monday’s talks.
Meanwhile, the far-right National Rally isn’t staying quiet. Their leader, Jordan Bardella, has demanded a meeting with whoever becomes the new PM, warning Macron, that they won’t be ignored.
What’s next for Macron?
Macron, 46, insists he’ll see out his term and deliver ’30 months of useful action.’ But with the clock ticking and the political knives out, France’s president is walking a tightrope. Can he pull off a political miracle, or will his government collapse faster than a soufflé in a storm?
Stay tuned for the next twist in France’s political drama.
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