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Jordan Bardella, the party chief of France’s Rassemblement National, warned on Monday that it would not hesitate to bring down the government over a budget that Prime Minister Michel Barnier has said is needed to tackle the country’s debt pile.
Negotiations between Barnier and the RN to find a compromise on the draft budget stalled ahead of a key vote in the National Assembly expected later on Monday, raising the risk that the minority government could fall as early as this week.
The budget’s fate and that of Barnier’s administration remain largely in the hands of Marine Le Pen’s far-right RN, the biggest single party and a key voting bloc in the National Assembly.
“The RN will trigger the mechanism to vote the censure unless there is a last-minute miracle and Barnier changes his draft law between now and 3pm,” Bardella told RTL radio on Monday.
“I don’t have much hope he will do so given how he has ignored and scorned us [and our proposals] in recent months.”
Since being named prime minister in September, Barnier has been rushing to pass a €60bn fiscal package for 2025, including significant tax increases, all aimed at reducing a deficit that stands at roughly 6 per cent of national output.
Investors have become increasingly concerned that he will fail to do so, plunging France deeper into political instability just as the economy sputters.
France’s borrowing costs, which briefly surpassed those of Greece last week, crept higher early on Monday, with yields on the 10-year bond rising 0.02 percentage points to 2.91 per cent. Yields move inversely to prices.
The gap, or spread, above German bond yields — a key measure of the riskiness of French bonds — rose to 0.85 percentage points, having hit a 12-year high of 0.9 points last week.
French stocks were down at the start of trading on Monday, with the benchmark Cac 40 falling 0.9 per cent. The euro weakened 0.6 per cent to $1.0510.
Le Pen has insisted all the RN’s “red line” demands must be met if the government wants to avoid a no-confidence vote. On Sunday, finance minister Antoine Armand said no further changes would be made to the contested security spending bill, one of three bills that make up the budget, although a government spokesperson said on Monday morning that they were “still open” to further discussions with the RN.
Without a majority in parliament, crafting a budget has proved tortuous for Barnier, forcing him to make concessions not only to the RN but also to MPs in his own camp. Those tweaks have cut about €10bn of planned savings out of the social security budget and will probably put Barnier’s goal of bringing the deficit down to 5 per cent by the end of 2025 out of reach.
On Thursday, Barnier abandoned a planned increase to electricity taxes, a measure fiercely opposed by the RN and other parties. But Le Pen continued to make other demands such as scrapping plans to temporarily freeze pensions or lower reimbursements for medicines and doctors’ visits.
If Barnier’s government was voted down this week, it would be only the second time French lawmakers have taken such a step since the Fifth Republic was established in 1958. It would also make Barnier the shortest-serving prime minister during the same period.