France mired in deadlock since president called snap elections which weakened his power and ended in a hung parliament
Far-right leader Marine Le Pen said Tuesday that the days of France's new government are already numbered, predicting an early presidential election in a few months. In an interview with Le Parisien last week,
The populist French leader is becoming increasingly emboldened as Emmanuel Macron faces increasing pressure to stand down
Le Pen said Macron was responsible for the ongoing political crisis and said he might be forced to resign as French president, a suggestion that Macron has forcefully rejected. French presidential elections are held every five years. Macron was elected in 2022 for a second mandate.
French far-right leader Marine Le Pen said on Wednesday that she was preparing for an early presidential election, saying President Emmanuel Macron's time in office was all but over.
French President Emmanuel Macron named a new government Monday evening, putting together a team under Francois Bayrou, his fourth prime minister of the year, to drag the second-largest EU economy
French President Emmanuel Macron on Friday named centrist ally François Bayrou as prime minister in an effort to address the country's deep political crisis, after a historic parliamentary vote ousted the previous government last week (AP Video: Marine Lesprit).
France is in a constitutional crisis, in economically difficult circumstances (it suffered another debt downgrade this weekend).
President Macron reluctantly appoints a would-be ‘reconciler’ as prime minister, while rightist Marine Le Pen rides even higher.
Nigel Farage was in fine fettle when he appeared on GB News on Tuesday evening. He boasted of his weekend in Florida, chewing the fat with Elon Musk, and made some characteristically
Bayrou, a 73-year-old stalwart of French centrism and one of President Emmanuel Macron’s earliest supporters, strong-armed Macron into appointing him last week. With this, France's fourth government in a year, he has promised to reconcile a divided country.
Ever since Xavier Bertrand's candidacy for the Ministry of Justice was first mooted, the Rassemblement National has voiced criticism of the man they consider to be one of their worst political enemies.