Europe | Here we go again

Emmanuel Macron has yet another stab at finding a prime minister

François Bayrou, an old hand, will face the squabbling that is paralysing France. How long will he last?

Newly appointed Prime Minister Francois Bayrou walks, in Paris.
Photograph: Reuters
|PARIS

AFTER OVER a week of trying to square the French political circle, President Emmanuel Macron on December 13th named one of his own as the country’s next prime minister: François Bayrou (pictured). A 73-year-old three-time presidential candidate whose party belongs to Mr Macron’s centrist alliance, he has spent nearly half a century hovering around the political centre. The loyalist Mr Bayrou takes over from the conservative Michel Barnier (also 73) who was evicted by the National Assembly on December 4th after he tried to push through a budget without a vote. The president made his choice after, reportedly, Mr Bayrou threatened to pull out of the centrist coalition. But he is likely to find it just as difficult as Mr Barnier did to produce a new budget for 2025 and shepherd it through a parliament that is split into three hostile minority blocs.

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