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France's new PM quits after less than a month in office

Published Oct 06, 2025 4:34 pm Updated Oct 06, 2025 5:13 pm

France's new Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu and his government resigned on Monday, Oct. 6, hours after Lecornu announced his cabinet lineup, making it the shortest-lived in modern French history.

The swift resignation was unexpected and marked another major deepening of France's political crisis. It came after allies and foes alike threatened to topple the new government.

Lecornu was prime minister for only 27 days, having been appointed on Sept. 9. His government lasted 14 hours.

The far-right National Rally immediately urged President Emmanuel Macron to call a snap parliamentary election. The hard left France Unbowed said Macron himself must go.

New cabinet lineup angered opponents

After weeks of consultations with political parties across the board, Lecornu, a close ally of Macron, had appointed his ministers on Sunday and they had been set to hold their first meeting on Monday afternoon.

But the new cabinet line-up had angered opponents and allies alike, who either found it too right-wing or not sufficiently so, raising questions on how long it could last, with no group holding a majority in a fragmented parliament.

Lecornu handed his resignation to Macron on Monday morning.

"Mr. Sebastien Lecornu has submitted the resignation of his Government to the President of the Republic, who has accepted it," the Elysee's press office said.

French politics has become increasingly unstable since Macron's re-election in 2022 for want of any party or grouping holding a parliamentary majority.

Opposition wants snap elections 

Macron's decision to call a snap parliamentary election last year deepened the crisis by producing an even more fragmented parliament. Lecornu, who was only appointed last month, was Macron's fifth prime minister in two years.

"There can be no return to stability without a return to the polls and the dissolution of the National Assembly," National Rally leader Jordan Bardella said after Lecornu resigned.

Mathilde Panot, of the hard left France Unbowed, said: "Lecornu resigns. 3 Prime Ministers defeated in less than a year. The countdown has begun. Macron must go."

Deep instability 

France has rarely suffered a political crisis so deep since the creation in 1958 of the Fifth Republic, the current system of government.

The 1958 constitution was designed to ensure stable governance by creating a powerful and highly centralized president endowed with a strong majority in parliament, and to avoid the instability of the periods immediately before and after World War Two.

Instead, Macron—who in his ascent to power in 2017 reshaped the political landscape—has found himself struggling with a fragmented parliament where the center no longer holds the balance and the far-right and hard-left hold sway.

France is not used to building coalitions and finding consensus.