The announcement came a day after Lecornu, a former defense minister, put together a new government and named Roland Lescure as finance minister.
In his resignation speech, Lecornu said, “By being more selfless for many, by knowing how to show humility. One must always put one’s country before one’s party.”
The Eurozone’s second-largest economy faces a political and economic impasse as Macron struggles to find someone who can guide his controversial budget through the National Assembly.
On Oct. 7, Lecornu was due to give a speech to the National Assembly, outlining his government’s plans for the future, but his sudden resignation means that Macron will have to seek a fifth prime minister.
Unions and left-wing activists protesting at planned cuts to public services have staged three days of nationwide protests since Lecornu’s appointment, including one that shut down the Eiffel Tower on Oct. 2.
French stocks fell on the morning of Oct. 6 following the news, with the CAC-40 index down 2 percent from its Oct. 3 close.
Macron has not spoken publicly since Lecornu resigned.
Marine Le Pen, the former leader of the right-wing National Rally who lost to Macron in the 2022 presidential election, said the resignation raises a question for the president.
“Can he continue to resist the legislature’s dissolution?” Le Pen said. “We have reached the end of the road. There is no other solution. The only wise course of action in these circumstances is to return to the polls.”
Macron was reelected as president in 2022, but in 2024 his Ensemble pour la République coalition fared badly in legislative elections, losing 86 seats.
The left-wing Nouveau Front Populaire (NPF) coalition became the biggest party in the National Assembly, and the right-wing National Rally, led by Jordan Bardella, also gained a large number of seats.
Between them, they objected to spending cuts in Macron’s proposed budget.
‘No Room to Maneuver’
Bardella told BFM TV on Oct. 6: “There is no doubt that the ephemeral prime minister had no room to maneuver, and it was certainly Emmanuel Macron himself who formed his government. ... There can be no stability without a return to the polls and a dissolution of the National Assembly.”The NPF had already threatened Lecornu with a no-confidence vote, and the National Rally is pushing for fresh legislative elections.
France’s political instability threatens to weaken Macron’s position as he wrestles with international issues, including wars in Ukraine and Gaza, and seeks to improve relations with U.S. President Donald Trump.
No French president has been impeached and removed from office, leading to a new presidential election, since the start of the Fifth Republic, the modern era of French politics, which began in 1958.
Élisabeth Borne was the first prime minister to serve under Macron during his second term, from May 2022 to January 2024, and her successor, Gabriel Attal, lasted only 8 months.
Michel Barnier, the European Union’s chief Brexit negotiator, then took over for 99 days before Bayrou was appointed in December 2024.
The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.







