President of France Emmanuel Macron. (Alexi J. Rosenfeld/Getty Images)

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Macron under increasing pressure to name new PM

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French President Emmanuel Macron was racing to find a new prime minister within a two-day deadline after the resignation of outgoing premier Sébastien Lecornu tipped the country deeper into political crisis.

The Presidency said late yesterday evening that Macron would name a new prime minister within the next 48 hours, indicating the appointment would come by tomorrow evening at the latest.

A declaration seemed unlikely today, with foreign ministers in Paris for talks on plans to help Palestinians after the Gaza war, then Macron due to attend a ceremony in the evening honouring a late justice minister who ended capital punishment.

An announcement of a new prime minister looked more likely tomorrow and could even include a cabinet line-up, a source close to the President said.

Lecornu told French television in an interview yesterday evening that he expected a new premier to be named – rather than early legislative elections or Macron’s resignation – in order to resolve the crisis.

Sébastien Lecornu. (Yong Teck Lim/Getty Images)

Unless Lecornu is reappointed, the new premier will be the eighth of Macron’s presidency.

Lecornu resigned early on October 5 after less than a month in office but Macron gave him up to yesterday evening to find a way out of months of deadlock over an austerity budget.

Lecornu’s two immediate predecessors were ousted by the legislative chamber in a stand-off over the spending plan.

The President “will name a prime minister within 48 hours”, the Presidency said, adding a “path was possible” to agree a budget by the end of the year.

The escalation of the crisis has turned into the worst political headache for Macron since he came to office in 2017, with close allies deserting a head of state who now appears increasingly isolated.

Former premier Edouard Philippe said that Macron himself should step down and call snap presidential polls.

But Lecornu insisted he should serve out his mandate until 2027, saying it was “not the time to change the President”.

Suggesting that a more technocratic government could be named, Lecornu said people in a new cabinet should not have “ambitions” to stand in the 2027 presidential elections.

“We need a team that decides to roll up its sleeves and solve the country’s problems until the presidential election,” he said.

Rumours swirled today on who could be next prime minister.

A person close to the President, asking not to be named, said Jean-Louis Borloo, a former minister under right-wing former presidents Jacques Chirac and Nicolas Sarkozy, could be a potential candidate.

But the 74-year-old centrist said he had heard nothing of it and had “zero” contact with the President’s office.

Whoever is named the new premier will likely face the same problems encountered by Lecornu and his two immediate predecessors, Michel Barnier and Francois Bayrou, who were both toppled by parliament.

After losing their majority in 2022 elections and ceding even more seats in snap polls last year, Macron’s centrists have governed in a de facto coalition with the right-wing Republicans.

But even this combination is a minority in parliament and any premier risks being voted out again if the left teams up with the far-right National Rally of Marine Le Pen.

Le Pen said yesterday she would thwart all action by any new government and would “vote against everything”.

Le Pen’s anti-immigration party senses its best ever chance of winning power in the 2027 presidential elections, with Macron barred from running having served two terms.

Critical to its hopes of survival could be the Socialists, who Macron has long tried to woo away from a broad left-wing alliance.

But Socialist leader Olivier Faure emerged from a meeting with Lecornu earlier yesterday, lamenting that the premier had “given no assurance” on a key request, that a hotly contested 2023 pension reform would be suspended.

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