France's Macron names centrist ally Bayrou as PM
President Emmanuel Macron on Friday named centrist Francois
Bayrou as prime minister, handing him the daunting task of hauling France out
of months of political crisis.
The 73-year-old head of the MoDem group which is allied to
Macron's party, was appointed nine days after parliament ousted Michel
Barnier's government in a historic no-confidence vote following a standoff over
an austerity budget.
"The president of the Republic has appointed Mr.
Francois Bayrou as prime minister and tasked him with forming a
government," the presidency said.
The announcement capped hours of drama that saw Bayrou
summoned to a morning meeting at the Elysee palace -- where he was reportedly
told Macron would choose another figure -- only for the presidency to finally
announce he had the post.
Bayrou is the sixth prime minister of Macron's mandate, with
his predecessor Barnier France's shortest-serving premier having lasted only
three months.
Bayrou faces an immediate challenge to form a cabinet that
can survive a no-confidence vote in a divided parliament, and to thrash out a
2025 budget in a bid to limit economic turmoil.
At the traditional handover ceremony with Barnier, Bayrou
declared: "No-one knows better than me the difficulty of the
situation," with France facing a ballooning budget deficit coupled with
political instability.
"I am fully aware of the Himalayas that loom ahead of
us," he said of the budget deficit which is now 6.1 percent of GDP.
He also vowed to fight what he described as the "glass
wall that has risen up between citizens and the authorities".
Handing over, Barnier told his successor: "Our country
is in an unprecedented and grave situation."
Several sources told AFP that the morning meeting between
Macron and Bayrou, far from marking the anointment of the new prime minister,
had been a stormy affair, with the president leaning towards naming his loyal
Defence Minister Sebastien Lecornu as premier.
Losing his temper, Bayrou threatened to break the alliance
with Macron, who decided it would be best to plump for Bayrou in the name of
unity, the sources said.
"Sebastien Lecornu should have been the one
named," said a source close to the talks. But Macron "did not have
the choice".
Mujtaba Rahman, Europe director at risk analysis firm
Eurasia Group, commented: "In the long history of the Fifth Republic
(founded in 1958), this may have been the first time that a prime minister
chose himself."
Bayrou will be tasked with holding dialogue with all
political forces except the far-right National Rally (RN) and hard-left France
Unbowed (LFI) parties "in order to find conditions for stability and
action", a member of Macron's team said on Friday.
"Francois Bayrou's name emerged in recent days as the
most consensual" choice, said the source, asking not to be named.
Macron was first expected to name a new prime minister in an
address to the nation last week.
In a sign of the stalemate, Macron did not name Barnier's
successor then and also missed a 48-hour deadline he gave at a meeting of party
leaders on Tuesday.
The president has been confronted with a complex political
equation since snap parliamentary elections in July: how to secure a government
against a no-confidence vote in a bitterly divided lower house where no party
or alliance has a majority.
Far-right leader Marine Le Pen, who teamed up with the left
to topple the Barnier government, said her RN party would not automatically do
likewise to Bayrou, but did not rule out exploiting such a "lever".
"I'm not threatening no-confidence motions morning,
noon and night. I'm just saying that I'm not giving up on this tool," she
said.
Socialists quickly posed conditions for not supporting a
no-confidence motion in an open letter to Bayrou.
He must agree not to ram laws through without a
parliamentary vote and not to rely on support from the far right, the party's
board said, adding that they would not accept ministerial posts.
Want to send us a story? SMS to 25170 or WhatsApp 0743570000 or Submit on Citizen Digital or email wananchi@royalmedia.co.ke
Comments
No comments yet.
Leave a Comment