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Macron government survives three no-confidence votes

Three votes of no-confidence in Emmanuel Macron's government - including one which saw far-right leader Marine Le Pen worked together with the leftist alliance - were defeated in parliament on Monday night.

Macron government survives three no-confidence votes
French far-right party Rassemblement National (RN) parliamentary group leader Marine Le Pen speaks in parliament. Photo by JULIEN DE ROSA / AFP

Both Le Pen’s Rassemblement National (RN) and the Nupes alliance of leftist parties had proposed motions of no confidence in the government, in protest over its handling of the budget debates.

With neither party willing to support each other, there seemed no chance of either bill passing, but on Monday afternoon Le Pen announced that her party would support the Nupes bill. However their combined vote was 239 MPs – short of the 289 required to bring down the government.

Two other motions of no confidence – another on the budget proposed by RN alone and one on the social security bill proposed by Nupes – were also defeated.

The government therefore lives to fight another day and the 2023 budget is officially adopted.

The centre-right party Les Républicains declined to support any of the votes, but their leader Olivier Marleix did not rule it out in future, telling Radio J: “If one day we have to vote on a motion of no-confidence, it will be the one we choose to file. And we do not rule out doing so.”

If Nupes, Rassemblement National and Les Républicains all joined together in voting for a no-confidence bill, they would likely have enough votes for it to pass.

Macron has already said that if a no-confidence vote passes, he will dissolve parliament and call new parliamentary elections.

A no-confidence vote does not directly threaten Macron’s position as president, but would leave him effectively unable to govern until new elections were called. At present his LREM group is the largest group in the parliament, but lacks an overall majority.

Because of this lack of majority Borne was unable to get the 2023 budget passed, and so used a constitutional tool known as Article 49.3 in order to force it through the blocked parliament. The motions of no confidence were called in response to the use of this power.

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EMMANUEL MACRON

Macron says ‘all European nationalists are hidden Brexiteers’

French President Emmanuel Macron said all European nationalists were "hidden Brexiteers" in an interview with the Economist published on Thursday, warning voters ahead of European elections next month.

Macron says 'all European nationalists are hidden Brexiteers'

“I say to Europeans: Wake up. Wake up! They are hidden Brexiteers. All European nationalists are hidden Brexiteers. It’s all the same lies,” he said.

“Make no mistake. If you entrust the keys to people who think like they do, there is no reason why Europe should become a great power,” he said.

“In a way it’s as if we were saying it’s not a problem if we entrust the bank to robbers. When they are around the table, they take Europe hostage.”

Macron gave the example of the French far-right Rassemblement National (RN) party, which is now leading in opinion polls for the European contest, ahead of his own centrist alliance.

The RN “wanted to pull out of Europe, out of the euro, out of everything,” he said.

“Now it no longer says anything. It’s reaping the benefits of Europe, while wanting to destroy it without saying anything.

“And that’s true in every country,” he added.

He noted that Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, whose Brothers of Italy party has neo-fascist roots, had “a European approach” and had “supported the asylum and immigration pact”.

But “after that, the best way of building together is to have as few nationalists as possible”, he added.

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