Macron reappoints Lecornu as French PM after days of turmoil
Sebastien Lecornu returns as prime minister with a mandate to pass the 2026 budget amid a hung parliament and rising public debt of 114% of GDP, officials said.
- French President Emmanuel Macron re-appointed Sébastien Lecornu as Prime Minister on October 10, days after his resignation, amid a political deadlock in the National Assembly.
- Critics, including Marine Le Pen, oppose Lecornu's re-appointment and threaten to block government actions, reflecting ongoing political tensions.
- France's public debt has reached 3.9 trillion dollars, with a rising poverty rate of 15.4%, presenting significant challenges for Lecornu's new cabinet.
607 Articles
607 Articles
The budgetary crisis, the vote of no confidence and the dispute over pension reform: the start of France's new government will become a tightrope act - and the Prime Minister must be in the same color.
Le Corneille presented his new team as a government with a mission to give France a budget before the end of the year - The key figures and the main challenges
Macron scrambles to restore stability, reappoints ex-PM amid France’s budget crisis
Last Monday, France had a déjà vu moment with yet another French prime minister leaving the job. In this case, it was Sébastien Lecornu, who spent a mere 27 days in the role — a record low since 1958. By late Friday, French President Emmanuel Macron had reinstated Lecornu.Lecornu stepped down amid a parliamentary stalemate over his inability to pass budgets and address other financial matters. It was also the day after he had established a cabin…
Briefly in office, resigned and back again: France's Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu tries to form a government again. Whether this works is unclear. That there will be massive resistance, on the other hand.
Today the new government's team, in time to approve the budget by tomorrow. But the parties come out of direct support. The political godfather of the president, Attal: "So it gives the impression of wanting only power."An executive of all and nobody. Sébastien Lecornu, the first Prime Minister of the...
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 42% of the sources are Center
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium