France Government Collapses, Emmanuel Macron on Brink

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French President Emmanuel Macron, left, and Prime Minister Francois Bayrou attend a meeting at the Elysee Palace in Paris, July 12, 2025. Associated Press

French President Emmanuel Macron, left, and Prime Minister Francois Bayrou attend a meeting at the Elysee Palace in Paris, July 12, 2025. Associated Press

Why It Matters

France’s minority government, led by Prime Minister François Bayrou, has collapsed less than nine months after taking office. By law, Bayrou must now submit his resignation, deepening political instability at a critical time for France—both economically and globally.

The fallout raises the risk of prolonged legislative gridlock, as the country faces mounting public debt, the wars in Ukraine and Gaza, and shifting U.S. foreign policy under President Donald Trump.

What Happened

The 577-seat National Assembly cut short its summer break for an emergency session filled with political tension. Bayrou had preemptively called a confidence vote in August, seeking support for tough fiscal measures. But the move backfired when lawmakers from both the far left and far right united to bring down his government.

Opposition leaders are now demanding fresh elections, Macron’s resignation, or leverage in shaping the next government.

Political Fallout

This is the third prime ministerial exit under President Emmanuel Macron in just over a year. Former Prime Minister Gabriel Attal stepped down in September 2024, followed by Michel Barnier, who was ousted in December. Bayrou’s departure leaves Macron searching for yet another replacement—highlighting his struggle to govern without a majority in a fragmented parliament.

Despite setbacks at home, Macron still controls foreign policy, EU affairs, and the military, including France’s nuclear arsenal. But his domestic agenda has stalled. The current crisis stems from Macron’s decision in June 2024 to dissolve the National Assembly in hopes of shoring up his centrist alliance. Instead, the elections produced a divided legislature with no clear majority for the first time in modern French history.

The Debt Dilemma

In his final speech as prime minister, Bayrou defended his decision to seek a confidence vote, citing France’s worsening debt crisis. As of early 2025, public debt had surged to €3.346 trillion—114% of GDP. Debt servicing now consumes around 7% of government spending.

Bayrou warned that unchecked borrowing risked eroding France’s sovereignty:

“Submission to debt is like submission through military force. Dominated by weapons, or dominated by our creditors—either way, we lose our freedom.”

Calls for Snap Elections

Far-right leader Marine Le Pen called for Macron to dissolve the Assembly again, believing her National Rally party could secure a majority in new elections. Although she had planned to run for president in 2027, a French court has barred her candidacy over a case tied to party finances. Le Pen denies the charges and is appealing the decision.

Speaking from the Assembly floor, she said:

“France is a great nation and cannot function with a paper government, especially in such a tormented and dangerous world.”

What’s Next

The Élysée Palace confirmed that Macron will accept Bayrou’s resignation on Tuesday. A new prime minister is expected to be named “in the coming days.”

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