France faces months of political instability as government nears collapse

Vocabulary: 342, Words: 678

Reuters The French National Assembly building in Paris, with the French flag flying above it

1Short of another surprise, France will once more be without a government on Wednesday.

2That is when Michel Barnier, appointed by President Macron after July’s inconclusive parliamentary election, faces a no-confidence motion over the budget - a vote he will almost certainly lose.

3As the left-wing MP Alexis Corbière put it in the National Assembly this afternoon: “That’s it for Barnier. 4He’s out of here.”

5The arithmetic is merciless for the former Brexit negotiator, who now stands to end his career as the shortest-lived prime minister in France’s Fifth Republic.

6From the start he has been leading an anomaly: a minority government whose very survival depended on the indulgence of its enemies.

7In the National Assembly, Barnier could count on his own conservative group and the Macronites. 8But this centrist bloc has been easily outnumbered by a left-wing coalition on one side, and on the other the populist right of Marine Le Pen.

9And when those two forces combine - as they will in Wednesday’s censure motion - then the numbers are too much, and Barnier must fall.

Reuters French Prime Minister Michel Barnier faces a vote of confidence in his minority government

10It is a crisis that has been waiting to happen, but was deferred till now by long procedural haggling over the 2025 budget.

11Shortly after taking office in September, he proposed a budget that promised €60bn (£49bn) in deficit reduction - necessary, he said, to satisfy Brussels and get the country’s finances back in shape.

12But because he lacked a majority, his budget was then disfigured by opposition amendments - from both left and populist right - which removed taxes and introduced more spending, thus changing its essential nature.

13After much parliamentary to-ing and fro-ing with the conservative dominated Senate, Barnier came back with a new text, or technically texts, because there is a social security budget as well as the overall budget.

14But that version remains unacceptable to the opposition.

15Marine Le Pen, who could save Barnier if she chose to, made a series of new demands, including removing a new tax on electricity, and restoring fully index-linked pensions).

16Barnier gave ground - quite a lot in fact. 17But it wasn’t enough. 18And now Le Pen plans to pull the plug.

19Barnier and his supporters have made much of their one good argument - the chaos scenario.

20What responsible party leader, they said, could want to tip France into the uncertainty and instability of yet another government crisis?

EPA Marine Le Pen sits with her arms folded as she watches on in the French National Assembly debate

21Would Marine Le Pen really want to take the blame for the inevitable turbulence on the financial markets, the hike in borrowing costs, the spending cuts that would follow?

22Her response has been to say that warnings of doom are exaggerated: there will be no catastrophe. 23Technically France might not have a budget (which it won’t if Barnier is ousted on Wednesday) but systems will kick in. 24The constitution allows for matters to be administered for a time by decree.

25Up to a point she is right.

26If Barnier falls, he will probably stay in power in a caretaker capacity while Macron (who is inconveniently in Saudi Arabia this week) seeks a replacement.

27That could take weeks, as it did in the summer after Macron lost his disastrously mismanaged early elections and Gabriel Attal stayed as caretaker until September.

28In the meantime a special law could be passed carrying the 2024 budget into 2025, so that civil servants are paid and hospitals meet their heating bills. 29An eventual new government would then pass a retrospectivecorrectivebudget to set the books straight.

30But the bigger picture is much more serious.

31The original political crisis triggered by Macron’s June dissolution of parliament has been exposed as the chronic disaster it always was. 32There is nofixwith aconsensus-buildingnegotiator of the Barnier mould.

33Barnier was the best the president could offer. 34And if Barnier has failed, it shows the situation is truly intractable.

35No new elections can be called until July. 36No stable government is conceivable. 37Some say the only answer is for Macron himself to go. 38Until now that’s been regarded as political fantasy.

39But how much more of this is France prepared to take?

from BBC