Macron announces January 16 meeting on New Caledonia's Bougival agreement

Following the government's decision to shelve a bill for an early consultation, President Emmanuel Macron has specified a January 16 meeting with New Caledonian elected officials in Paris to advance dialogue on the territory's future and clarify the fragile Bougival agreement.

In a letter to local elected officials, reviewed by AFP, President Macron confirmed a January 16 gathering to "continue the dialogue" on New Caledonia's institutional future and "provide clarifications" on the Bougival agreement, signed July 12 after the Élysée summit.

The agreement, aiming to create a State of New Caledonia within the French Constitution and backed by most political forces, was rejected by the main independentist FLNKS coalition. Signatories demand amendments for consensus amid timeline fragility: the draft law for a March 2026 consultation was not presented to the Council of Ministers as planned, after an expert mission failed.

The Caledonian Congress deadlocked on December 8 (19 for, 14 against, 19 abstentions), and even supporters like UNI condition backing on changes. This follows spring 2024 violence (14 deaths) and economic damage.

The meeting represents a key step to explore paths forward in the divided archipelago.

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Paris courtroom scene of defamation trial: Kanak leader Christian Tein on video screen from Nouméa, empty seat for absent Sonia Backès.
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Defamation trial pits Tein against Backès in Paris

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Paris judicial court examined on Thursday, January 15, a defamation complaint filed by Christian Tein, Kanak independentist leader, against Sonia Backès, a loyalist figure, who accused him of being 'the leader of the terrorists' after the 2024 riots. Tein appeared via videoconference from Nouméa, while Backès did not attend the hearing. This case comes ahead of an Élysée meeting on New Caledonia's future.

Following Minister Naïma Moutchou's announcement of a delay, the French government has abandoned plans—at least for now—to introduce a bill for an early consultation of New Caledonians on the Bougival agreement. Emmanuel Macron will convene stakeholders in Paris in mid-January 2026.

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President Emmanuel Macron launched a new round of talks on New Caledonia's institutional future on Friday, January 16, 2026, at the Élysée Palace, without the main independentist movement, the FLNKS. The aim is to clarify the Bougival agreement signed in July 2025, advancing without force but avoiding paralysis. Participants from other political groups showed determination amid ongoing tensions.

Following Parliament's unanimous adoption of a special finance law on December 23, 2025, to bridge funding amid failed 2026 budget talks, Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu insists a compromise remains possible in January. Yet, the measure—echoing last year's—prolongs uncertainty rooted in the June 2024 National Assembly dissolution, with significant fiscal and political costs.

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Following the joint committee's failure on December 19 and ongoing consultations, Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu's government presented a three-article special law to the Council of Ministers on Monday evening, chaired by President Emmanuel Macron. Set for votes in the National Assembly and Senate on Tuesday, it extends 2025 budget terms temporarily to avert public service shutdowns, while Macron demands a full 2026 budget by end-January targeting a 5% deficit.

Representatives from the ecologist and communist groups boycotted a January 6 meeting at Bercy on the 2026 budget, claiming no illusions about the debate's outcome. Only the socialists from the left attended, alongside Republicans and Macronists. This absence hinders the bill's adoption in the Assembly and bolsters the likelihood of using article 49.3.

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Despite Emmanuel Macron's decision to vote against the EU-Mercosur agreement in Brussels, Jordan Bardella, president of the National Rally, announced on Thursday a motion of censure against Sébastien Lecornu's government. He describes the French position as a hypocritical and belated maneuver, denouncing a betrayal of farmers. This comes as the European Union prepares to sign the deal despite French opposition.

 

 

 

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