France’s government collapsed on Monday, September 08, 2025, after Prime Minister François Bayrou lost a confidence vote in the National Assembly, leaving President Emmanuel Macron with limited political options.
The centrist government fell during attempts to push through cost-cutting measures addressing France’s ballooning debt, creating immediate paralysis in domestic policymaking.
Macron is expected to appoint a new prime minister within days, avoiding calls for snap elections or resignation.
The president favors maintaining a center-right leadership style that preserved previous reforms like the retirement age increase.
Potential candidates include Defense Minister Sébastien Lecornu or Economy Minister Éric Lombard, who has advocated for budget compromises.
The National Assembly remains deadlocked among three blocs: left-wing parties, a fragile center-right coalition, and the nationalist far-right.
Mixed division has created legislative gridlock since last year’s snap elections failed to produce a clear majority.
Meanwhile far-right and far-left parties demand new elections but Macron’s coalition, projected to lose seats, resists this option.
Le Figaro Magazine by the Verian Group recent poll shows only 15% of voters express confidence in Macron, though he has vowed to serve his full term until 2027.
The constitution allows caretaker governance until new leadership is appointed, but pressure mounts from planned September protests against austerity measures.
Unions have called for nationwide strikes on September 18, while activist groups threaten broader disruptions.