Connect with us

World

French government faces vote of no confidence – Europe live

Published

on

French government faces vote of no confidence – Europe live

How did it come to this?

The roots of the debacle lie in President Emmanuel Macron’s decision to dissolve parliament in June and the resulting snap election, which returned a parliament divided into three roughly equal groups with no majority.

That meant Barnier’s minority centrist and centre-right government was, in effect, at the mercy of the left-leaning New Popular Front (NFP) alliance and the far right National Rally (RN), which together had enough MPs to unseat it.

On Monday, Barnier said he would ram the social security part of the budget through without a parliamentary vote – a procedure which gives opposition MPs the chance to challenge the government with no-confidence votes.

Both the left and the far right have pledged to do so this afternoon, after a debate due to begin at 4pm local time (3pm GMT). A vote on the motion thought most likely to pass – there are two – is expected at about 7pm.

No new elections can be held until June, and Macron – who is thought unlikely to resign himself, at least for the time being – will face the daunting task of appointing a new government with parliament more bitterly divided than ever.

There’s a more in-depth explainer on how the crisis came about, why it’s happening now, and Macron’s possible options here:

You can also read more about the crisis here and, in a standback, big-picture analysis, here.

Share

Updated at 

Key events

During a session of parliamentary questions for ministers earlier this afternoon, the government spokesperson, Maud Bregeon, accused the opposition left-leaning NFP and far right RN of being “engineers of chaos”, BFM-TV reported.

In a few hours’ time, Bregeon said, “the struggles of the RN and the NFP will converge. Every MP will then make their choice in that knowledge, and will have to take responsibility before their voters for having been at the root of a longterm weakening of the country.”

President Emmanuel Macron, on his way back from a presidential visit to Saudi Arabia earlier on Wednesday and under pressure from both leftist and far-right MPs to step down, said talk of him potentially resigning was “make-believe politics”.

Macron told reporters that he was “here because I’ve been elected twice by the French people,” adding: “We must not scare people with such things. We have a strong economy.”

The leader of the mainstream centre-left Socialist party (PS), part of the leftist NFP alliance, told Le Monde that Macron needed to make his futire intentions clear if the Barnier government does indeed fall.

“Rather than dropping little remarks during a visit to Saudi Arabia, Macron now needs to speak to the French people,” he said. “How can he leave the French people in this uncertainty just before Christmas?”

Share

Updated at 

A note on the mechanics of the afternoon and early evening: the parliamentary debate kicks off at 4pm local time (3pm GMT) with a discussion of an unrelated matter tabled by the radical left LFI.

That means the debate on the two no-confidence motions should in principle begin at about 4.45pm. The motions, one presented by the left-leaning NFP alliance and the other by the far right RN, will be debated together.

One speaker from each parliamentary group will address the motions, starting with MP Eric Coquerel for LFI. He will be followed by Marine Le Pen for the RN, then the Socialist party (PS), the centre-right Les Républicains, the Greens and the various centrist parties that make up Emanual Macron’s alliance.

Each speaker is strictly time-limited, so we can be fairly sure we will have about two-and-a-half or two-and-three-quarter hours of debate, with a vote then due at about 7.45pm local time. Voting should take about 45 minutes.

Deputies will vote first on the NFP’s no-confidence motion – the one most likely to pass. To succeed, the motion needs 288 votes – slightly less than the assembly’s 289-seat majority because three bye-elections are underway.

In principle, therefore, Michel Barnier and his government’s fate should be decided by about 8.30pm this evening.

Share

Updated at 

How did it come to this?

The roots of the debacle lie in President Emmanuel Macron’s decision to dissolve parliament in June and the resulting snap election, which returned a parliament divided into three roughly equal groups with no majority.

That meant Barnier’s minority centrist and centre-right government was, in effect, at the mercy of the left-leaning New Popular Front (NFP) alliance and the far right National Rally (RN), which together had enough MPs to unseat it.

On Monday, Barnier said he would ram the social security part of the budget through without a parliamentary vote – a procedure which gives opposition MPs the chance to challenge the government with no-confidence votes.

Both the left and the far right have pledged to do so this afternoon, after a debate due to begin at 4pm local time (3pm GMT). A vote on the motion thought most likely to pass – there are two – is expected at about 7pm.

No new elections can be held until June, and Macron – who is thought unlikely to resign himself, at least for the time being – will face the daunting task of appointing a new government with parliament more bitterly divided than ever.

There’s a more in-depth explainer on how the crisis came about, why it’s happening now, and Macron’s possible options here:

You can also read more about the crisis here and, in a standback, big-picture analysis, here.

Share

Updated at 

Hello and welcome to the blog

The political crisis looming in France since summer could take a dramatic new turn this afternoon, with the three-month old government of French prime minister Michel Barnier thought likely to be felled by a no-confidence motion.

If it succeeds, the vote – over the government’s proposed 2025 budget, which includes €60bn (£50bn) in tax hikes and spending cuts – would make Barnier’s fragile administration the first in France to be ousted in this way since 1962.

It would also become the shortest-lived government in the history of the Fifth Republic, which began in 1958, and plunge a core EU member state into even deeper crisis weeks before Donald Trump arrives in the White House.

Follow us here for all the latest developments and new updates as they happen.

Continue Reading