Nestled in the park of the Hôtel Matignon in Paris, the 18th-century music pavilion serves as a discreet venue for government leaders to hold confidential meetings. This historic site of the Fifth Republic has recently hosted crucial discussions involving Michel Barnier and François Bayrou amid current political instability.
The music pavilion, an 18th-century stone building at the far end of the grand park of the Hôtel Matignon in Paris, is a secret annex favored by prime ministers to avoid prying eyes. During the Fifth Republic, it has been the stage for historic negotiations, and it maintains a key role in the current period of political instability.
On December 9, 2024, Michel Barnier, ousted by a no-confidence motion five days earlier and in office for just three months and eight days, held a singular lunch there with François Hollande, one of his 'overthrowers.' 'Why did you censure me?' Barnier reportedly asked, according to his remarks in a telephone interview on January 16. He explained that the Socialist Party had decided to censure him regardless of his actions, believing the post-dissolution prime minister should be from the left.
The following month, François Bayrou, Barnier's successor, hosted three PS leaders there: deputies Olivier Faure and Boris Vallaud, along with senator Patrick Kanner. The aim was 'to agree on what would allow us not to censure again,' Boris Vallaud specified. These confidential talks highlight the pavilion's ongoing role in sensitive political dealings at Matignon.