France looks set to throw out another PM

Andrew HardingParis Reporter, Paris and Chalons-En-Champagne
Getty ImagesFrance’s parliament – entered a dead end for a year and is more toxicly divided than for decades – it seems ready to throw another prime minister on Monday.
However, the sense of acute drama surrounding Paris’s last vote of confidence in Assemblée Nationale is balanced with a desperate consensus that the almost inevitable abolition of the 74 -year -old François Bayrou cannot do anything to break the political stalemate of Fansa.
“This is a disaster. The situation is definitely blocked.” He said.
Others were even harder in their diagnosis.
Marine Le Pen, the parliamentary leader of the hard right national rally party, accused Bayrou of “suicide”.
The Prime Minister, a figure seeking a consensus that tends to frown and hawthorn from South-West France, launched a surprise vote on Monday, and began to deal with the country’s approaching debt crisis.
Getty ImagesThe Bayrou, who describes the national debt of France as a “very dangerous period … time of hesitation and turmoil”, warned that parliament was “high risk of irregularity and chaos” in order to reduce government expenditures (£ 38bn £).
Bayrou said that if 114% of France’s annual economic output does not cope with a national debt, young people would be upset with years of debt payments for “Boomers’ comfort”.
However, Bayrou’s gambling-a Kamikaze gesture, a meaningless Cassandra-like prophecy and political career with a heroic dedication attempt, characterized as an attempt to end the gambling-Saturday, it seems almost definite to end the failure.
Despite the crazy last -minute discussions, it seems clear that Bayrou has no votes.
In the center of the “crisis” – a word that seems to have spent a year dominated by the French newspaper headlines – President Emmanuel Macron’s decision to “clarify the balance of power in Parliament in June 2024 to” clarify “a large -scale decision to call a parliamentary election.
The result was the opposite of clarity. French voters, the arrogant, influential young President, moved towards extreme ends, flocked Macron with a weak minority centralist government, and today many rival deputies left a parliament that could not even withstand each other’s hand.
Getty ImagesSo when?
The mood in France seems to be dragged to the right and right rather than the parliamentary power struggles on the left bank of the Paris River of the Paris River.
“Jordan, Jordan,” he shouted, reaching a large agricultural fair in Chalons-En-Champagne in the east of Paris, and the 29-year-old leader Jordan Bardella, the national rally, was crowded around.
For an hour, Bardella passed through the crowd and took a selfie with his fans.
“It looks like a good man. France is fighting. France is competing. We pay too much tax and we don’t understand how they are spent and prices are rising.” He said.
“[Bardella] It will overhaul our country. I am not racist, but I feel that there are many people waiting in France and that we cannot take all the miserable of the world, “said Christine.

“He’s a handsome man. He has a good idea. There are too many immigrants who come here. Mr. Bardella said.
At one point, I managed to reach Bardella in crushing, and – after the game of confidence on Monday – I asked if France could see another choice that could be the next prime minister.
“We are working on it. This country has been in a dead end for more than a year. It is dangerous to leave France’s dragging in this way and allow those who have been in power for decades to destroy the country for decades. We want to do our best to stop the mass migration to France.
And still he believes that in France, very few president Macron will call another early parliamentary election, or indeed he will resign from his own role before ending in 2027.
It is probably another attempt to find a way to a minority government. After trying to cut the agreements on the right over and over again, he wonders if Macron will try something new.
ReutersSocialist MP Arthur Delaport, Normandy, “We think it is time for the president to try the left, because we will have a different method. We will try to reach a compromise. Savings will make a budget to invest for a green transition for the future… At the same time he taxes the richest people.” He said.
As Macron’s next prime minister continues to speculate about who can choose, other challenges are approaching.
Here he focuses not only on important industrial actions in the coming weeks, but also on a wave of street protests. A new base movement, called “let’s block everything”, was active on social media and called on the French people to call the country to stop this Wednesday.
“There is an anger balloon in the country,” the commentator Bruno Cautrès offers a warning to Macron.
“Macron is extremely active at the international level, especially with Ukraine, this last two weeks. And I think Macron’s time is time to talk to the French.…. There is a very high anger, frustration, tension.”





