Europe | Barnier’s exit

Emmanuel Macron loses another prime minister

Michel Barnier’s fall accelerates the unravelling of the French centre

An illustration of a blindfolded cockerel stepping off a grassy cliff edge.
Illustration: Mona Eing & Michael Meissner
|PARIS

Emmanuel Macron, France’s president, had barely landed from Saudi Arabia when he lost another prime minister, his third this year. In a no-confidence vote on December 4th, an unholy alliance of the left and Marine Le Pen’s hard-right National Rally (RN) brought down Michel Barnier, a conservative with whom Mr Macron has shared power since September, by a total of 331 deputies, 43 more than was needed. The vote followed Mr Barnier’s use of a special provision to force his budget through parliament. It marks the first time deputies have toppled a government since 1962. With Mr Barnier, the budget falls too, plunging France into yet more political instability. Mr Macron’s great centrist project is unravelling fast.

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This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “Thread by thread”

From the December 7th 2024 edition

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