Sunday, September 8, 2024 - Michel Barnier, the EU’s former chief Brexit negotiator, has been named France’s new prime minister, the French president, Emmanuel Macron's office says, after two months of stalemate following inconclusive parliamentary elections.
In a statement on Thursday, September 5, the Élysée Palace
said: “The President of the Republic has appointed Michel Barnier as Prime
Minister. He has to form a united government to serve the country and the
French people.”
The statement added that Barnier’s appointment comes after
“an unprecedented cycle of consultations” in order to ensure a stable
government.
Barnier, 73, is best known on the international stage for
his role in mediating the United Kingdom’s exit from the European Union.
A 40-year veteran of French and European politics, Barnier
has held various ministerial positions in France, including roles as foreign,
agriculture and environment ministers. He served twice as a European
commissioner as well as an adviser to the President of the European Commission
Ursula von der Leyen. In 2021, Barnier announced his bid for presidential
elections but failed to garner enough support within his party.
Macron accepted the resignation of former Prime Minister
Gabriel Attal and his government in July after his centrist Ensemble alliance
was defeated in the second round of France’s snap parliamentary election.
The leaders of France’s main far-right and far-left
political parties reacted to the appointment of Barnier following Thursday’s
announcement, with the far left condemning the decision.
Jordan Bardella, president of the far-right National Rally
party, said on social media that his party will “judge” Barnier based on his
inaugural “general policy speech, his budgetary decisions and his actions.”
Bardella’s party colleague Marine Le Pen also stressed in
televised remarks that the party “will not participate in any government
whatsoever” until after they have heard Barnier’s speech laying out his policy
plans.
Le Pen did go on to praise Barnier on one level, saying the
veteran politician is “someone who is respectful of the different political
forces” and “capable” of addressing her party.
Jean-Luc Melenchon of the far-left France Unbowed party
delivered a rebuke of President Macron, accusing him of “stealing” the
parliamentary elections held in July.
“The president has just
officially denied the results of the legislative elections that he himself had
called for. He (Barnier) is a member, among others, of a party which was last
in the legislative election. The election was therefore stolen from the French
people,” Melenchon remarked in a televised speech.
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