French opposition leaders Mathilde Panot and Marine Le Pen protesting in the National Assembly, demanding government censure and new elections, with tense officials in the background.
French opposition leaders Mathilde Panot and Marine Le Pen protesting in the National Assembly, demanding government censure and new elections, with tense officials in the background.
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LFI and RN threaten to censure Lecornu II government

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The newly announced Lecornu II government immediately faces censure motions from La France Insoumise and Rassemblement National. Mathilde Panot and Marine Le Pen demand dissolution of the National Assembly for fresh elections. Ecologists will wait for the policy declaration before deciding.

The Lecornu II government, whose composition was revealed on the evening of Sunday, October 12, 2025, is already under fire. Sébastien Lecornu, reappointed Prime Minister the previous Friday after his resignation on October 6, must form a team in a fragmented National Assembly context.

From La France Insoumise (LFI), the leader of the deputies, Mathilde Panot, reacted on the social network X, estimating that this appointment signals a «Macronie increasingly isolated and shriveled». She warned the new ministers: «Advice to the newcomers: don't unpack your boxes too quickly. Censure is coming. And Macron's departure will follow». Manuel Bompard, another LFI figure, stated he wants «to end the Macron era».

The Rassemblement National (RN) takes a similar stance. Its group president, Marine Le Pen, announced the filing of a censure motion as early as Monday morning. «We will file a censure motion against it tomorrow. The President of the Republic must announce the dissolution of the National Assembly as soon as possible to allow the French people to express themselves», she wrote on X, convinced that early elections would lead to her party's victory. This reversal follows the end of the RN's institutionalization strategy, initiated after Lecornu's resignation on October 6, where Marine Le Pen ruled: «The farce has lasted long enough».

The Ecologists are more reserved. Marine Tondelier, national secretary, stated on October 12 in the «Questions politiques» program that «a dissolution won't solve much», recalling the cost of the previous one: 15 billion euros and 0.5 points of growth lost. Her group will wait for Lecornu's general policy declaration, focused on ecology, tax justice, and pensions, before voting a unitary motion if no confidence vote is proposed.

Olivier Faure, first secretary of the Socialist Party, reacted laconically, without an explicit promise of censure.

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Sébastien Lecornu's new government, formed on October 12, faces immediate no-confidence motions from La France Insoumise and the National Rally. The Socialist Party, led by Olivier Faure, demands the suspension of the retirement reform or it will vote to censure. Lecornu is set to deliver his general policy statement to the National Assembly on October 14.

Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu has asked the Interior Minister to study organizing early legislative elections on the dates of the municipal polls, March 15 and 22, 2026, in anticipation of a possible government censure. This follows motions of censure filed by the Rassemblement National and La France Insoumise against the Mercosur treaty, despite France's opposition to the deal. Emmanuel Macron and Lecornu are considering dissolving the National Assembly if the government falls.

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Sébastien Lecornu's government survived two no-confidence motions in the National Assembly on Thursday, backed by the Socialist Party in exchange for suspending pension reform. The La France Insoumise motion failed by 18 votes, with 271 in favor against 289 needed. The National Rally motion garnered only 144 votes.

A poll reveals that 52% of French people anticipate the failure of the 2026 finance bill and want a censure motion against the Lecornu government. The finance commission rejected the first part of the budget, and debates in the National Assembly begin this Friday without using article 49.3. Oppositions, like the RN and socialists, threaten to block the bill with their counter-proposals.

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In his general policy speech to the National Assembly on October 14, 2025, Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu announced the suspension of the pension reform until 2028, a concession to socialists to avert a censure motion. The Socialist Party confirmed it would not censure the government immediately, while right-wing voices voiced opposition. This move aims to stabilize the country and pass a budget by year's end.

The French government expects a ministerial reshuffle at the earliest mid-next week, following a possible no-confidence motion from the Rassemblement national. Three ministers are set to depart due to appointments or electoral candidacies. This timing respects the parliamentary schedule and the reserve period for municipal elections.

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France's Council of State confirmed on Monday, November 10, the forced resignation of Marine Le Pen from her Pas-de-Calais departmental councilor role, following her conviction for public funds embezzlement. This ruling heightens doubts over her 2027 presidential bid. The Rassemblement National party faces growing criticism of its economic policies as its leaders seek dialogue with business leaders.

 

 

 

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