Lawmakers in the National Assembly, the French parliament’s powerful lower house, made several amendments and voted to approve the bill Tuesday evening, followed by the Senate. It passed despite deep divisions among the assembly's three main camps — Marine Le Pen's far-right National Rally, left-wing forces, and Macron's centrist minority government.
The next step will be harder: building a real budget for 2026, and averting a new political crisis.
The emergency law ’’is like a spare tire,″ Finance Minister Roland Lescure told lawmakers, urging quick work on a real budget for next year. Relying on it for too long ‘’risks greatly weakening the French economy.″
Macron is desperate to bring down the huge deficit to 5% of economic output, or GDP, and bring back investor confidence in France’s economy after protracted political deadlock and turmoil prompted by his ill-fated decision to call snap elections last year.
France has a high level of public spending driven by generous social welfare programs, health care and education, and a heavy tax burden that falls short of covering the costs.
Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu, who resigned then was reappointed this fall, appealed Tuesday to all parties to work through the holidays to find compromises on a 2026 budget after a previous effort crashed last week.
Lecornu's minority government won relief earlier this month when parliament narrowly approved a key health care budget bill, but at the cost of suspending Macron’s flagship pension reform meant to raise the retirement age from 62 to 64.
