French PM Bayrou survives yet another no‑confidence motion, but his government remains fragile
Prime Minister François Bayrou survived an eighth no‑confidence vote after the far‑right National Rally abstained, with only 189 MPs supporting the motion, well below the 289 required to oust him.
The motion was triggered by the failure of pension reform talks between Bayrou’s government and the Socialist Party and forms part of mounting parliamentary tension in a minority government context. Looking ahead, France now faces €40 billion in planned spending cuts for the 2026 budget. Bayrou’s fate may rest on future budgetary battles, leveraging similar tactics to those of his predecessor, Michel Barnier.
🔁 Political Reactions:
- Jordan Bardella (RN): “This isn’t the right moment for more instability. We’ll revisit after budget debates.” (reuters.com)
- Socialist critics: > “We raised pension issues in good faith, but Bayrou stepped back.” (newscentral.africa)
- Political analyst: > “He survived, but ministerial fragility remains. Budget talks could be the real test.”
📰 Bias Snapshot & Framing:
- Reuters/France 24 sticks to facts, votes, numbers, and procedural survival, emphasising fragility without editorialising.
- Politico Europe notes Bayrou’s reliance on the far right’s abstention, warning his position hinges on budget deals, not stability. (politico.eu)
- Le Monde adds historical context, Bayrou follows a succession of short-lived PMs in a hung parliament and faces repetition of past pitfalls. (lemonde.fr)
📊 Sentiment: Neutral–negative. Bayrou survived, yet the vote underlines deep vulnerability. Upcoming budget negotiations, including proposed spending cuts, pose a fresh and possibly decisive challenge.