Emmanuel Macron gives a resigned New Year's address from Élysée Palace, highlighting 8.9 million viewers amid unpopularity.
Emmanuel Macron gives a resigned New Year's address from Élysée Palace, highlighting 8.9 million viewers amid unpopularity.
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Macron's 2026 New Year's address: 8.9 million viewers amid unpopularity

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President Emmanuel Macron's New Year's address on December 31, 2025—the shortest since 2017 at under 10 minutes—drew 8.9 million viewers, a decline from 2024. Delivered in a tone of resignation from the Élysée Palace, it highlighted economic resilience, outlined 2026 priorities, and addressed his 2027 departure, against a backdrop of political instability and low approval ratings.

From the Salon des Ambassadeurs at the Élysée Palace, seated by a Christmas tree and candles, Macron delivered his penultimate New Year's speech without reviewing his full term, simply affirming France's strength amid public doubts.

Building on the priorities announced (voluntary national service, digital protections for youth at age 15, and end-of-life legislation), the address praised low inflation and employment gains but omitted the political crisis or public finances. In a global context of rising nationalisms—including under U.S. President Trump—Macron invoked French values of humanity, peace, and freedom, quoting Albert Camus and referencing historian Marc Bloch, soon to enter the Panthéon, to urge resistance to 'the spirit of the times.'

For the first time, he explicitly noted his ineligibility for the 2027 election, pledging to work until the last moment and protect it from foreign interference.

Viewership totaled 8.9 million (Médiamétrie), with 7.8 million on main channels: TF1 (3.15 million), France 2 (2.86 million), M6 (1.23 million), France 3 (523,000)—down from prior years, reflecting peak unpopularity post-2024 Assembly dissolution. Former PM Édouard Philippe remarked in December 2025, 'nothing important for the country will truly be done until the next presidential election.' An anonymous minister added: 'He is really in an inextricable situation. His image is very, very damaged and then there's the end-of-term effect: he is exiting the game.' Thus, Macron seems set for a lame-duck role in a divided France.

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Reactions on X predominantly criticize the 8.9 million viewers for Macron's 2026 New Year's address as a sharp decline from prior years like 9.7 million in 2024 and 11.2 million in 2017, attributing it to unpopularity and successful boycott efforts. High-engagement posts from public figures highlight minute-by-minute audience drops and demand Macron's departure. A minority view the figures as respectable despite the context of his short, resigned-toned speech.

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President Macron in televised address on Iran war and Khamenei's death, with Middle East conflict visuals.
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Macron's Televised Address on Iran War and Khamenei's Death

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Following initial reactions from France's political class to the death of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in an Israeli-US strike, President Emmanuel Macron addressed the nation on Tuesday evening, the fourth day of the offensive against Iran. He discussed Khamenei's death, French military reinforcements in the Middle East, repatriation of nationals, criticized the strikes for breaching international law while blaming Tehran primarily, and called for an end to hostilities and diplomatic negotiations.

France's 2026 budget was promulgated on February 20 after an unprecedented process, featuring nearly 25,000 amendments and over 50 days of delay. Almost fully approved by the Constitutional Council on February 19, this text stands as the most debated in the Fifth Republic's history, with a result deemed disappointing by all observers.

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Jean-Luc Mélenchon, leader of La France insoumise, announced his fourth run for the 2027 presidential election on Sunday evening during TF1's 20 heures news. He conditions his candidacy on gathering 150,000 citizen endorsements, seen as a mere formality. The decision follows a meeting of LFI elected officials in Paris that day.

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