Bruno Retailleau presents the Republicans' economic project

Following the 'common foundation' experience, Les Républicains aim to reposition themselves by unveiling their economic project led by Bruno Retailleau. This document seeks to project the party into the future while distinguishing it from current pressures. Amid the upcoming budget debate, it provides an alternative to the dilemmas posed by socialist demands.

Les Républicains (LR) face a dual challenge: projecting into the future and asserting their political singularity. The presentation by Bruno Retailleau of the party's economic project directly addresses this need. It comes in a context marked by the failure of the 'common foundation' and calls to align with an arc including the outgoing Macron camp.

The debate on the 2026 finance bill (PLF) is poisoning political life again by the end of January. Public opinion and actors share an obsession: to close this discussion as quickly as possible. However, speeding up often means yielding to the Socialist Party's demands, which call for 10 billion euros in additional taxes and 8 billion in extra spending. If Minister Sébastien Lecornu refuses to use article 49.3, LR is stuck between two tricky options: approve the Lecornu-Faure text and shoulder a budgetary forward flight, or oppose it and risk prolonged blockage.

By organizing the debate around a 2027 project, Retailleau offers a more constructive path. This allows escaping the infernal budget framework and charting a clear line for the party's future, away from current budgetary mishaps.

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Bruno Retailleau speaks urgently at podium, advocating Article 49.3 for France's 2026 budget amid political deadlock.
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Bruno Retailleau calls for Article 49.3 to pass responsible 2026 budget

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Bruno Retailleau, president of Les Républicains, has joined earlier calls from figures like former Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne urging Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu to invoke Article 49.3 for a responsible 2026 budget, without further concessions to socialists. In an Ouest-France interview, he criticizes deals with the PS that allowed the social security budget to pass but stalled the state budget, following Friday's joint committee failure. Lecornu plans talks Monday to avoid deadlock.

Bruno Retailleau, president of Les Républicains, is navigating a challenging period since leaving the government, highlighted by internal divisions over the social security budget. Eighteen deputies from the Droite républicaine group, led by Laurent Wauquiez, voted in favor of the bill, sparking tensions with Retailleau. He plans to reflect on his 2027 presidential ambitions during the year-end holidays.

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Bruno Retailleau, leader of Les Républicains, has officially announced his candidacy for the 2027 presidential election during an evening at the party's headquarters in Paris. Committed by duty to the race for the Élysée, he remains serene amid internal competition and the possibility of a primary. Several potential candidates are emerging on the right and in the center.

On January 23, 2026, Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu again invoked Article 49.3 to pass the spending portion of the 2026 budget at the National Assembly, following the failure of two censure motions. Left-wing and far-right oppositions failed to secure an absolute majority, allowing the government to proceed despite lacking a parliamentary majority.

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Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu announced on Monday, January 19, 2026, after a Council of Ministers, that he would engage the government's responsibility on Tuesday via Article 49.3 of the Constitution to pass the revenues part of the 2026 budget, despite his initial promise not to use it. This decision, driven by parliamentary deadlock, aims to reduce the public deficit to 5% of GDP and includes concessions to the Socialist Party, such as maintaining a corporate surtax at 8 billion euros. La France Insoumise and the National Rally plan to file no-confidence motions.

Debates on France's 2026 budget project promise to be fierce in the National Assembly, with over 1,700 amendments filed for the revenues section. Budget rapporteur Philippe Juvin sharply criticizes the planned tax increases and calls for cuts in public spending. The finance committee review begins on Monday, October 20, in a tight schedule.

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The social security financing bill (PLFSS) for 2026 was narrowly adopted in the French National Assembly on December 9, 2025, by just 13 votes. The vote highlighted fractures within the former majority, including abstentions from Horizons deputies and support from Renaissance and MoDem. Republicans also split, weakening their leader Bruno Retailleau's authority.

 

 

 

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