
FRENCH Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu is set to face two crucial votes of no-confidence in parliament on Thursday but may narrowly avoid defeat after offering to suspend President Emmanuel Macron’s controversial pension reform to secure backing from the Socialist Party
Reuter reported on Thursday, Lecornu, who holds the record as France’s shortest-serving prime minister in recent history prior to his recent re-appointment, appeared at risk of an even briefer second tenure until his concession on Tuesday to delay the pension changes until after the 2027 presidential election.
The Socialists, whose support is vital for Lecornu’s political survival, welcomed the move and confirmed they would not back the no-confidence motions tabled by the far-left and the far-right National Rally.
Despite this, the outcome remains uncertain as potential dissidents from both the Socialists and the conservative Republicans introduce doubt into the vote’s result.
“If I were a member of parliament, I would vote for (the no-confidence measure)... because I believe that today we are being presented with a Socialist budget, and I am not a Socialist,” said Republicans party vice-president Florence Portelli in an interview with RTL radio. “Our voters expect us to have values.”
Lecornu’s offer to shelve the pension reform, a cornerstone of Macron’s economic agenda, threatens to dismantle one of the president’s signature domestic achievements amid fragile public finances and an otherwise thin portfolio of successes after eight years in office.
The parliament counts 265 lawmakers from parties openly calling for Lecornu’s removal, just short of the 289 votes needed to topple him. According to BFM TV, Lecornu’s margin for survival could be as slim as 10 votes.
Should Lecornu lose the vote, he and his cabinet would be compelled to resign immediately, placing immense pressure on Macron to call snap parliamentary elections and plunging France into further political instability.
If Lecornu survives, he will still confront weeks of challenging negotiations to pass a reduced 2026 budget, during which his government remains vulnerable to another potential downfall.
Following the pension reform concession, the Socialists have already set their sights on securing a tax on billionaires within the forthcoming budget, highlighting the prime minister’s weakened position.
France is currently engulfed in its most severe political crisis in decades, with successive minority governments struggling to advance deficit-cutting budgets through a fractious parliament divided among three ideological blocs.
Reforming the nation’s generous pension system has long been political poison. Since Socialist President François Mitterrand reduced the retirement age from 65 to 60 in 1982, attempts to alter the system have met fierce resistance.
Currently, the average effective retirement age in France stands at just 60.7 years, compared to the OECD average of 64.4. Macron’s reform plans to raise the statutory retirement age to 64 by 2030 would bring France more in line with other European Union countries, but it erodes a deeply cherished social benefit that remains popular with the left. - October 16, 2025
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