Dramatic photo of French PM Lecornu clashing with senators in Senate chamber over looming 2026 budget committee deadlock.
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2026 Budget Joint Committee Risks Failure After Senate Tensions

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Following the Senate's adoption of its revised 2026 finance bill favoring spending cuts, the joint parliamentary committee (CMP) set for Friday appears headed for deadlock due to government-LR Senate clashes. PM Sébastien Lecornu eyes a special law as backup, blaming Republican 'radicalism,' while Socialists quietly favor Article 49.3.

The CMP, uniting seven senators and seven deputies on December 19, seeks to align the National Assembly and Senate versions of the 2026 finance bill (PLF). Tensions escalated after the right-center Senate passed its spending-cut-focused text on December 15, prompting sharp criticism from PM Lecornu.

Irritated by LR group president Mathieu Darnaud's attacks during a Wednesday Senate session, Lecornu vented at a Thursday Matignon dinner with Public Accounts Minister Amélie de Montchalin and budget rapporteurs Philippe Juvin (LR, Assembly) and Jean-François Husson (LR, Senate), warning 'it's going to go nuts' without compromise. His team told AFP and Le Monde that CMP failure would lead to a Council of State-backed special finance law for a minimalist budget by December 31.

Lecornu pins the impasse on 'radicalism' from part of the Les Républicains Senate group. LR Senator Christine Lavarde countered in Le Figaro that a CMP text boosting taxes without savings, likely backed by PS, would struggle in the Senate.

Socialists, after Lecornu's October pledge to avoid Article 49.3 (which aided PLFSS passage), now whisper hopes for its use on the PLF amid left irritants. Ecologists will oppose any compromise text, dooming Assembly passage without 49.3. These 'more political' talks underscore Parliament's fractures.

What people are saying

Discussions on X reflect widespread pessimism about the 2026 budget joint committee's success due to government-Senate tensions. Journalists highlight chaos and Lecornu's special law contingency, blaming LR radicals. Left politicians criticize alternatives as undemocratic. LR figures remain optimistic about negotiations. Sentiments range from neutral reporting to skeptical and partisan critiques.

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Dramatic illustration of French parliament crisis: joint committee fails on 2026 budget, Prime Minister Lecornu plans special law to avert shutdown.
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French 2026 Budget: Joint Committee Fails, Special Law Planned for Monday

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As anticipated amid pre-CMP tensions, the joint committee on the 2026 finance bill failed on December 19, prompting Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu's government to advance a special law for parliament review on Monday evening to avert a state financial shutdown from January 1.

The French Senate adopted a revised version of the 2026 finance bill on Monday, December 15, by 187 votes to 109. This copy, favoring spending cuts over tax increases, will serve as the basis for discussions in the joint committee on Friday. Negotiations look challenging amid divergences between the two chambers.

Reported by AI

Building on the joint committee's failure on December 19, Parliament is accelerating adoption of a special law early next week to secure temporary state financing from January 1, while Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu launches consultations with party leaders starting Sunday. Impacts include the suspension of the MaPrimeRénov' program.

The National Assembly's finance committee rejected the 'expenses' section of the 2026 budget on Saturday, following the dismissal of the 'revenues' part the previous day. Discussions, plagued by absenteeism, failed to reach agreement, widening the public deficit. The government still aims for adoption by month's end to keep the deficit below 5%.

Reported by AI

The National Assembly rejected two motions of censure against Sébastien Lecornu's government on Tuesday, allowing the adoption in new reading of the 2026 finance bill. The left-wing motion excluding the PS garnered 267 votes, short of the 289 required, while the RN's received 140. The bill is now sent to the Senate for review.

France's 2026 finance law concludes with a fragile compromise, criticized as a list of renunciations amid demographic, climate challenges and an unsustainable debt. Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu announced on January 16 a lackluster deal, where each party claims small victories amid widespread frustration.

Reported by AI

The National Assembly overwhelmingly rejected the revenues section of the 2026 budget bill in the night of Friday, November 22, to Saturday, November 23, 2025, sending the text to the Senate without reviewing expenditures. The government hopes for a compromise, but the option of a special law extending the 2025 budget is gaining traction to avoid default. Opposition figures like Sarah Knafo prefer it to the deputies' amended version.

 

 

 

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