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    24 commenti

    1. corbynista2029 on

      >François Bayrou was ousted as prime minister on Monday, September 8, after losing a vote of confidence in the Assemblée Nationale. Bayrou and his government lost the vote by 364 votes to 194, with opposition parties uniting against him.

      Yikes. Zero mandate for another centrist….but not going to stop Macron!

    2. Taskebab on

      Hey, it’s France, there have been worse ways heads of government have been ousted

    3. Square-Region6137 on

      What’s France’s play now then? Will Macron appoint another PM? Or are they headed for another election? From the outside, Macron has managed the parliament really weirdly since the last election. The left coalition got the most votes but he still appointed a PM from his party.

    4. Hopeful_Stay_5276 on

      Proving that if you vote to let the far right in, you’ll never have any kind of stability in politics.

    5. PolydamasTheSeer on

      His call for intergenerational fairness kinda made sense to me. It seems he was doing something right. Shame he got ousted. France needs someone who will make hard decisions instead of promising handouts.

    6. squiggyfm on

      At this rate he can pick a PM from any party, let them self-immolate in a few months, and move on to the next party.

    7. Individual_Winter_ on

      What does it mean? Are there going to be strikes? Like end of September? 🫣

    8. TrueRignak on

      Not surprising, but is it nice to know that Bayrou the Lazy King (except when it is to protect pedopriests), Stérin-owned Retailleau the entrist, or Lombard aka Mr. “I rewrite the law against cumcum fraud after it being voted to ensure it won’t be applied” have been ousted.

      The questions now is “For how long ?” Will Macron nominate the same government ? Will he go furhter to the right ? Will he try a Von Papen again and call for new elections ?

    9. Sad-Attempt6263 on

      lemonde with an excellent picture.  this could be interpreted in so many ways lmao

    10. BelgianPolitics on

      After revoking the Dutch mandate to joke about Belgian politics, I am now revoking the French mandate to joke about Belgian politics.

      Belgium is actually looking stable now compared to our neighbours.

    11. OkKnowledge2064 on

      Oh boy. Fun times ahead. I dont even see any realistic governments

    12. krazydude22 on

      France, this is getting boring and repetitive. Try something different..

    13. Canard_De_Bagdad on

      So long, child-slapping pedo-school-covering economically-illiterate boomer. We’ll miss you.

      No, I mean, actually, we will probably miss him. The next one will be even worst. Might even be a fascist from the RN.

    14. Resident_Ad_7550 on

      With the current parliamentary configuration (almost 1/3 for the Left coalition, 1/3 for the Far Right and 1/3 for Centrist coalition) there won’t be any single way a stable power form could work…

      You appoint anyone from La France Insoumise (Panot, Mélenchon) , Parti Socialiste (Faure, Hollande), Europe Ecologie Les Verts (Voynet, Tondelier), Parti Communiste Français (Brossat) (Left side coalition), both the Far Right and Centrist coalition will fight them…

      You appoint anyone from Les Républicains (Michel Barnier who was expunged thanks to a Motion de Censure), or anyone from Mouvement Démocrate (François Bayrou, recently ousted), or from Ensemble (Elizabeth Borne (2022-2024)) you know perfectly both the Far Right and the Left will kick them.

      Finally the Far Right has the same problem! Anybody from their party (Tanguy, Le Pen) will suffer the same treatment from the Left or the Centrists.

      France became impossible to govern thanks to egocentrist point of view of the traditional left and right parties (very bi-partisan country between 1959 and 2017) and very poor performances of their respective recent presidencies (Sarkozy 2007-2012 Les Républicain) (Hollande 2012-2017 Parti Socialiste)

      Macron’s first presidency was a way to kick out politicians of the traditional parties (even if most did just schmooze to save a seat in the current governing, ref -> check on wikipedia the List of Deputés of the XV, XVI and XVII legislature and you’ll see many did schmooze to keep power)

      Now people are growing tired of that shit, which explains why RN despite incompetency, still peak at 30-35% even once given at 40% in a poll of 2024 for 2027 presidential election…

      [From a Frenchman who is sick of that shit and wondering if we can do anything? Oh wait our commercial balance is negative since 1974… Nah we’re as fucking bankrupt as Greece in a decade…]

    15. ISayHeck on

      Is the plan here to reduce pension pay by just having everyone take a stab at being the prime minister?

    16. What we really need is some compromising, because unless they make some deals there isn’t a way for France to get a government. That’s unlikely but tbh that’s the only way forward

    17. IchNiSanDa on

      Macron’s position is seriously becoming untenable. I doubt he’ll try for a NFP member to lead the new government (as he should have done after the elections last year). Whoever he chooses will likely face the same fate as Bayrou. There’s no more legitimacy to his choices any more, and it’s too easy for the opposition parties to stifle and protest. Each day he remains because “muh mandate’ is another day where he further erodes the people’s confidence in the political system and opens up the door for RN or LFI.

    18. PurchaseDry9350 on

      The French people did not vote for right wing parties, they voted left. The left wing won the election. It’s a disgrace he was even appointed.

    19. mrsuaveoi3 on

      So another year with a frozen budget. And maybe the same for 2027. So austerity by default seems to be in play here…

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