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Six premiers in three years: Why French President Macron’s government keeps falling apart | Explained

Lecornu is now the sixth prime minister to exit in three years, underlining the deadlock created by a fragmented National Assembly, repeated no-confidence votes and widespread opposition to Macron’s spending cuts and reform agenda.

October 06, 2025 / 14:44 IST
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FILE PHOTO -- France's President Emmanuel Macron (L) and France's Minister of Armed Forces Sebastien Lecornu leave following the annual Bastille Day military parade on the Champs-Elysees Avenue in Paris on July 14, 2025. (Photo by Ludovic MARIN / AFP)

France’s political crisis deepened on Monday as President Emmanuel Macron accepted the resignation of Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu, just hours after unveiling his cabinet. Lecornu, a close ally and former defence minister, had only been appointed last month but quickly ran into the same roadblocks that brought down his predecessors. The new cabinet faced fierce criticism across party lines, and the prospect of winning parliamentary approval for an austerity budget looked increasingly impossible.

Lecornu is now the sixth prime minister to exit in three years, underlining the deadlock created by a fragmented National Assembly, repeated no-confidence votes and widespread opposition to Macron’s spending cuts and reform agenda.

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Why Macron keeps losing prime ministers

A divided parliament: Since Macron lost his majority in snap elections last year, the National Assembly has been split almost evenly between centrists, the far-right, and the left. Unlike in Germany or the Netherlands, France does not rely on coalition governments, which makes it harder to build stable alliances.