French far-right party likely to back no-confidence motion against government

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Jordan Bardella, President of the French far-right Rassemblement National (National Rally - RN) party gestures as he speaks during a political rally in Nice, France, October 6, 2024. REUTERS/Manon Cruz/File Photo

RN president Jordan Bardella said the party will trigger the no-confidence vote mechanism unless there is a last minute change by Prime Minister Michel Barnier, but Mr Bardella said there is little hope of that.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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PARIS - France’s far-right National Rally (RN) party will likely back a no-confidence motion against the government in the coming days unless there is a “last minute miracle”, RN president Jordan Bardella said on Dec 2.

RN lawmaker Marine Le Pen has given Prime Minister Michel Barnier until Dec 2 to yield to the party’s budget demands or face the threat that they would back a no-confidence motion against his government, which would lead to its collapse.

“The RN will trigger the no-confidence vote mechanism unless there is a last minute miracle if (PM) Michel Barnier revises his copy before 3pm, but I have little hope of that,” Mr Bardella told RTL radio.

Mr Barnier dropped a planned electricity tax increase last week, but the RN also wants him to raise pensions in line with inflation whereas he had aimed to increase some of them less than inflation to save money.

The RN is also calling for planned cuts to medication reimbursements to be scrapped and is unhappy the government may raise tax on gas.

It also wants a reduction in France’s contribution to the European Union’s budget among other demands.

The stand-off could come to a head as early as Dec 2 if Mr Barnier has to use aggressive constitutional powers to force a social security financing bill through, which would inevitably trigger a no-confidence motion from the left.

France is facing a difficult financial and economic situation due to the risk that the country’s budget may be blocked in parliament France public audit office head Mr Pierre Moscovic said on Dec 2.

“Our financial situation today is dangerous,” Mr Moscovici told France 2 television. REUTERS

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