The French parliament is considering a vote of no confidence in the Bayrou government, initiated by the opposition, by far-left MPs a few hours after the keynote speech of new Prime Minister François Bayrou, according to Le Monde, Report informs via UNN.
“The sooner you leave, the better,” said Jean-Luc Melenchon, leader of the far left and head of the Unconquered France party, in the meeting room.
The motion of no confidence in the Bayrou government was also supported by the Communists and environmentalists. A total of 57 deputies.
Currently, the initiative has a low chance of success, as, without the votes of the Socialist Party and the far-right National Union, the vote of no confidence will not receive the required number of votes.
The Socialists, who have 66 MPs, said that their position would depend on the prime minister's attitude to revising the pension reform. However, even if this party supports the government's resignation, its fate will depend on the decision of the National Union, which has 124 MPs, the largest faction.
The far-right has not yet announced a final decision, but party president Bardella sharply criticized Bayrou's speech in parliament.
Nothing about purchasing power, nothing about insecurity, nothing concrete about immigration: the lives of the French are an empty paragraph in this useless speech, he noted.
An absolute majority of 287 votes is needed to dismiss the new government, with three of the 577 parliamentary seats currently vacant.
The previous government, led by Michel Barnier, was in power for three months.