HomeWorldFive premiers in three years: Why French President Macron keeps changing prime ministers | Explained

Five premiers in three years: Why French President Macron keeps changing prime ministers | Explained

Successive premiers have fallen victim to a fractured National Assembly, repeated no-confidence motions and fierce resistance to Macron’s budget-cutting and reform agenda.

September 10, 2025 / 21:47 IST
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File photo of France's newly appointed prime minister Sebastien Lecornu (L) and France's President Emmanuel Macron.
File photo of France's newly appointed prime minister Sebastien Lecornu (L) and France's President Emmanuel Macron.

President Emmanuel Macron named close ally Sebastien Lecornu as the new French Prime Minister on Tuesday (September 9), a day after a confidence vote in parliament removed Francois Bayrou from the post. Lecornu, formerly defence minister, is the fifth person to hold the job since Macron’s re-election in 2022, highlighting the political instability that has gripped France. Successive premiers have fallen victim to a fractured National Assembly, repeated no-confidence motions and fierce resistance to Macron’s budget-cutting and reform agenda. Lecornu now faces the same uphill task: steering a deficit-reduction budget through a deeply divided parliament and a protest-weary country.

A fragmented national assembly

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France’s National Assembly is split almost evenly between centrist, far-right and far-left blocs. No group holds a commanding majority, which makes it extremely difficult for any prime minister to steer legislation through parliament. Where countries like Germany or the Netherlands rely on formal coalitions, France’s Fifth Republic is not built on a coalition culture. Instead, the president appoints a prime minister and expects them to deliver votes on a case-by-case basis.

Frequent no-confidence votes