French 2026 budget marks a series of renunciations

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.

The adoption of France's 2026 finance law occurred in a fragmented political landscape, following uses of Article 49.3 of the Constitution and failed censure motions. This text, described as lacking substance by Le Monde editorialist Stéphane Lauer, creates an illusion of a financial framework for a country without a majority or clear priorities, as public debt mounts.

Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu aimed for a fruitful compromise but settled for a patchwork solution, announced on January 16 from Matignon. Parties blame each other for the outcome, designed around minor victories. La France insoumise and Rassemblement national revel in the general frustration.

The Parti socialiste secures an increase in the activity bonus, 1-euro meals for students, suspension of the retirement reform, and abandonment of doubling medical deductibles, enacted late December 2025 by the social security finance law. Les Républicains preserve the tax abatement for retirees and income tax scale indexing to inflation. Renaissance retains payroll charge reductions. Spending cuts are confined to the bare minimum.

Lauer argues this budget fails to prepare minds for tough times, overlooking demographic, climate, industrial stakes and an unsustainable debt.

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French National Assembly celebrates rejection of censure motions and adoption of 2026 budget amid opposition protests.
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French National Assembly adopts 2026 budget after rejecting no-confidence motions and months of debate

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The French National Assembly on February 2, 2026, rejected two no-confidence motions against Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu's government, definitively adopting the 2026 finance bill after a four-month saga of intense debates. The compromise text targets a 5% GDP deficit—deemed insufficient by experts—following concessions, three uses of Article 49.3, and opposition criticism, with the bill now headed to the Constitutional Council for review before late promulgation.

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.

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Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu announced several measures on Friday evening to amend the 2026 budget project, hoping to secure a compromise with opposition parties and avoid censure. Key announcements include an increase in the activity bonus and the abandonment of unpopular tax reforms. He has given himself until Tuesday to finalize an agreement, without specifying whether he will use Article 49.3 or ordinances.

France's 2026 budget remains inapplicable due to multiple referrals to the Constitutional Council, including by the government itself. This unprecedented move since 1977 suspends its implementation until a decision expected by February 20. Several opposition parties have also challenged fiscal and social measures in the text adopted on February 2.

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The French government canceled Thursday the debates scheduled for Friday and Monday at the National Assembly on the 2026 budget bill, postponing them to Tuesday, when it may opt for Article 49.3 or ordinances to pass the text without a vote. This decision follows what Matignon calls 'continuous sabotage' by RN and LFI deputies, making adoption by vote impossible. Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu will present proposals Friday to attempt a compromise and avoid censure.

The Senate's finance commission adopted a series of amendments to the 2026 budget draft on Monday, November 24, aiming for lower corporate taxes and more savings while keeping the deficit target at 4.7% of GDP. Amid the blockage in the National Assembly, Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu called for votes on absolute priorities such as defense and agriculture. The Senate also rejected government-proposed restrictions on sick leave.

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French Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu has engaged his government's responsibility on the revenues section of the 2026 budget, invoking Article 49 paragraph 3 of the Constitution for the first time. This measure, the first in a series of three, comes after over 350 hours of stalled debates in the National Assembly. Left-wing and far-right oppositions are preparing no-confidence motions, but socialists and Republicans will abstain.

 

 

 

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