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Macron vows to serve out presidential mandate despite budget crisis

 

French President Emmanuel Macron said he would continue his mandate until the end of its term in 2027, despite a high-stakes confidence vote on September 8 that could bring down the government and plunge France into a new period of prolonged instability.

France's President Emmanuel Macron attends a joint press conference with German Chancellor as part of the 25th Franco-German cabinet meeting and a meeting of the Franco-German Defence and Security Cou
France’s President Emmanuel Macron attends a joint press conference with German Chancellor as part of the 25th Franco-German cabinet meeting and a meeting of the Franco-German Defence and Security Council (CFADS) in Toulon, south-eastern France, on August 29, 2025. © Manon Cruz, AFP

French President Emmanuel Macron vowed Friday to serve out his term despite a political crisis over budget policies that on September 8 will see a confidence vote that could topple his prime minister.

Macron has given his “full support” to French Prime Minister François Bayrou after his decision to call the confidence vote fuelled fears that France risks a new period of prolonged political and financial instability.

Bayrou’s move has also raised questions for Macron, who has less than two years of his mandate left, with the hard left calling on the president to resign – something he has always rejected.

“The mandate entrusted to me by the French people… will be served out until its end, in line with the committment I made to them,” Macron told a press conference, as he hosted German Chancellor Friedrich Merz.

Macron said Bayrou was not facing “an insurmountable challenge” and called on political players to find “ways to agree” on his proposed budget.

Bayrou, 74, wants to save about €44 billion ($51 billion), but his proposal to scrap two public holidays and place a freeze on spending increases has angered many in France.

Should Bayrou lose the September 8 vote, he must resign along with his entire government.

Macron could either reappoint him, select a new figure who would be the head of state’s seventh premier since taking office in 2017, or call early elections to break that political deadlock that has now dogged France for over a year. / (FRANCE 24 with AFP) 

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