*** Fears of new political crisis grip France | THE DAILY TRIBUNE | KINGDOM OF BAHRAIN

Fears of new political crisis grip France

AFP | Paris

Email : editor@newsofbahrain.com

Fears of a new political crisis swept through France on Tuesday as the minority government of Francois Bayrou appeared likely to be ousted in a confidence vote next month.

France’s embattled prime minister stunned the country on Monday, announcing he had asked President Emmanuel Macron to convene an extraordinary session of parliament on September 8.

Bayrou needs parliamentary backing for his austerity measures to reduce France’s soaring public debt but the main opposition parties -- from the far-right to the hard-left -- said they would not back the prime minister’s plan. The announcement came as calls mounted to stage a nationwide shutdown on September 10 to protest against Bayrou’s proposed budget cuts.

Speaking on Tuesday, Bayrou urged France’s political forces to think twice, noting they had 13 days to “say whether they are on the side of chaos or responsibility.”

“Is there or is there not a national emergency to rebalance the ac - counts, to esc a p e excessive debt by choosing to reduce our deficits and produce more?” Bayrou said.

“That is the central question.” Far-right leader Marine Le Pen – whose National Rally party has abstained in previous votes of confidence against Bayrou, allowing him to survive – now says she wants parliament dissolved and new parliamentary elections called.

Hard-left firebrand Jean-Luc Melenchon, who has launched previous unsuccessful attempts to bring down Bayrou, suggested that Macron must resign if Bayrou, 74, loses this time.

“Macron is chaos,” the head of the hard-left France Unbowed party said on Tuesday, adding he would propose a motion of no confidence against the president in parliament.

“He must go.”

Political competition is intensifying in France ahead of the presidential election in 2027 when Macron’s second term is set to end.

Macron, 47, has repeatedly faced calls to resign since dissolving parliament last year after far-right gains in European elections, plunging the country into crisis.

But he has insisted that he will stay on until the end of his term and has also said he wants to avoid dissolving parliament and calling snap parliamentary elections again.

Were Bayrou to be rejected by parliament, it would leave Macron seeking his seventh prime minister and cast a heavy shadow over the remaining two years of his presidential mandate.