French President Emmanuel Macron reconducts Sébastien Lecornu as Prime Minister in the Élysée Palace, shaking hands amid efforts to form a new government for the 2026 budget.
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Sébastien Lecornu reconducted as prime minister to form new government

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Emmanuel Macron reconducted Sébastien Lecornu as prime minister on October 10, 2025, four days after his resignation, to form a government focused on passing the 2026 budget. Lecornu promised a 'more free' executive without presidential candidates and open to debates on pension reform. Oppositions, including Les Républicains and the Socialist Party, rejected participation but threaten censure without concessions.

Sébastien Lecornu, reconducted at Matignon on Friday, October 10, 2025, by Emmanuel Macron, accepted the mission 'out of duty' despite his resignation the previous Monday. In an interview with La Tribune on Sunday, he stated he could announce his new government's composition on Monday or Tuesday, followed by a general policy declaration on Tuesday or Wednesday. He visited a police station in L'Haÿ-les-Roses in Val-de-Marne on Saturday, October 11, where he praised law enforcement and prioritized fighting incivilities and delinquency.

Lecornu set conditions with Macron: a government without potential 2027 presidential candidates, to focus on the budget urgency. 'If the conditions were no longer met, I would leave,' he warned. He expressed openness to 'all debates' on pension reform, demanded for suspension by the left, while defending past achievements.

Les Républicains, led by Bruno Retailleau, decided during a political bureau meeting on October 11 not to join the government but to support texts on a case-by-case basis to avoid dissolution. Laurent Wauquiez, LR deputies' leader, urged 'verbalizing support' to restore calm and pass a budget. The Socialist Party, through Olivier Faure and Pierre Jouvet, called the reconduction a 'total disconnection' and threatened censure without immediate suspension of pension reform. The Modem's Marc Fesneau declared readiness to 'engage fully' for stability.

The timeline is tight: the 2026 finance bill must be presented to the Council of Ministers by October 13 at the latest and deposited at the National Assembly on October 15, for a vote before December 31. An Ipsos poll for La Tribune shows Lecornu with 27% favorable opinions and 55% unfavorable.

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Emmanuel Macron reconducts Sébastien Lecornu as prime minister

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Emmanuel Macron reconducted Sébastien Lecornu as prime minister on Friday evening, four days after his resignation, hoping to pass a 2026 budget without dissolving the Assembly. Lecornu, accepting 'out of duty', must form a government without presidential ambitions and reopen debates on key reforms like pensions. Left-wing and far-right oppositions already threaten censure.

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.

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President Emmanuel Macron and reappointed Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu announced Sunday evening the composition of a new 34-member government, blending civil society figures and moderate political personalities. This team, facing censure threats from the opposition, aims to pass the 2026 budget by year-end. Republicans exclude their members who joined the executive, deepening right-wing internal divisions.

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.

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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.

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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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.

 

 

 

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