The president’s office said in a statement that Macron “accepted” the departure of Prime Minister Gabriel Attal and alternate ministers on Tuesday. The note said that the permanent and alternative executive would have to “handle contemporary affairs until a new government is appointed.”
There is no firm timeline for when Macron will have to appoint an unelected prime minister, after this lifetime parliamentary elections left the National Assembly without a major political faction in power for the first date in the Popular Republic of France. -There is no limit.
The acting executive under Atal will focus only on handling day-to-day matters.
“In order to end this period as soon as possible, it is up to all Republican forces to work together for projects and actions that serve the French people,” the president’s remarks said.
An outlet session of the National Assembly, the strongest lower chamber of France’s parliament, is scheduled for Thursday.
In most cases, presidential figures are barred from becoming lawmakers, but Tuesday’s development allows Atal to take his seat as a lawmaker and rule over Macron’s throng of centrist allies in the National Assembly. It also protects him from a no-confidence vote, as he has already resigned and a caretaker executive cannot be subject to any such vote.
France is getting ready for the executive paralysis Since last week’s National Assembly elections have led to a rift between three major political groups: the leftist Common Front coalition, Macron’s centrist allies and the far-right National Rally of Marine Le Pen.
untouched common entrance won the most seats However, cleverly the scale of absolute majority fell down and he himself had to take the lead.
3 major events of the leftist coalition, hard-left France Unbowed, Socialists and Vegetables, Have recommended to the President to show them Unused to control the executive, but their internal negotiations became a bitter dispute over who should be selected as High Minister.
France Unbowed suspended talks on Monday, accusing the Socialists of sabotaging the candidacy put forward to replace Atal.
Socialist Party leader Oliver Faure said on Tuesday that if the leftist coalition wants to meet “the public’s expectations” and fulfill its pledge that it is “ready to govern” it needs to “think, talk and There is a need to restart the discussion.
Faure said some of the coalition’s birthday-celebrating leaders’ lengthy discussions, people’s bickering and angry verbal exchanges over coffee “do not look good.” However, “the stakes are so high that it is not unusual for us to talk for a long time and, sometimes, we shout,” Faure said on France Inter radio.
Sébastien Chenu, vice president of the nationwide rally, said the rift on the left is a sign that the untouched Common Front is “not ready to govern.”
He also attacked Macron on Tuesday, saying keeping Atal in the presidency after two recent elections – for the European Parliament and the National Assembly – was a “denial of democracy”.
Chenu said in an interview with Europe 1 and CNews broadcasters that retaining him to directly rule on “current affairs” is tantamount to “failing” the French family.
“We can’t make something new out of an old thing,” Chenu said. “Atal will have to pack his bags, him and all his ministers.”
Politicians from the three main groups are also battling over the presidency and key committees in the National Assembly, the influential lower chamber of France’s parliament.
Manuel Bompard, a lawmaker from France Unbiased, said he supported Marine Le Pen’s far-right nationwide rally’s vision to bar lawmakers from holding positions on parliament’s committees, such as finance, defense and others.
Despite Le Pen’s party finishing third in the polls, behind Macron’s centrist team and the leftist coalition, Bompard said in an interview with France 2 TV that “we have no reason to help them reach positions of responsibility”. Not there.”
Le Pen, a French speaker and a National Rally lawmaker, stressed that “all political forces must participate in the functioning of parliament”.
“People have spoken. There are 577 legislators who represent them,” Le Pen said in a post on X. “Even though I am the last one to defend democracy, I insist that the Macronists, the New Popular Front, National Raleigh and Eric Ciotti (a national Raleigh affiliate) should be represented in the legislative body,” she said.
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Surk reported from Gretzky, France.
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