France’s new PM resigns sparking fresh political chaos

French Army Minister Sebastien Lecornu left the Elysee Palace at the end of the weekly cabinet meeting in Paris on 8 November 2023.
Ludovic Marin | AFP | Getty Images
Sebastien Lecornu, the new French prime minister, resigned only weeks after his appointment and immersed the country into a new political crisis.
Lecornu, the fifth PM of France, has cut off in less than two years to convince the country and investors – a divided and divided parliament enough to receive a 2026 budget.
A few consecutive governments were founded on the basis of the dissatisfaction of public unrest and the dissatisfaction of French affairs on the scattered state of French affairs, after not being able to pass the budgets that detailed expenditure cuts and tax increases.
Former Defense Minister and French President Emmanuel Macron’s ally, Lecornu for a long time, called a new cabinet on Sunday and resigned only from the houses. Seeing that most of the high -profile figures remained in their duties, the new cabinet would have his first meeting on Monday.
Now France has fought into a new political crisis that will put great pressure on Macron, who has now established three unsuccessful minorities.
Lecornu, on Tuesday, the government’s road map, the parliament, the National Assembly would make a speech.
The parties of both the left and right of the political spectrum in France were closely monitored to see how Lecornu plans to close a budget deficit of 5.8% in 2024 and closely monitoring like the European commission.
Both levels are far above the EU rules that demand that individual members do not exceed 3% of GDP, while public debts should not exceed 60% of economic production.
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