France’s re-appointed prime minister Lecornu calls for calm amid political chaos

Update France’s re-appointed prime minister Lecornu calls for calm amid political chaos
France’s newly reappointed premier Sebastien Lecornu now faces the task of forming a cabinet to present a 2026 draft budget on Monday. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 11 October 2025
Follow

France’s re-appointed prime minister Lecornu calls for calm amid political chaos

France’s re-appointed prime minister Lecornu calls for calm amid political chaos
  • Lecornu called for calm and for the support of political parties
  • “I don’t think there were a lot of candidates,″ Lecornu told reporters Saturday

L’HAY-LES-ROSES, France: France’s newly re-appointed prime minister acknowledged Saturday that there weren’t "a lot of candidates" for his job — and that he might not last long in the post given the country’s deep political divides.
Sebastien Lecornu, renamed by President Emmanuel Macron late Friday after a week of political chaos, called for calm and for the support of political parties to produce a budget for the European Union’s No. 2 economy before looming deadlines.
His appointment is seen as Macron’s last chance to reinvigorate his second term, which runs until 2027. His centrist camp lacks a majority in the National Assembly and he is facing increasing criticism even within its ranks.
But rivals from far right to far left slammed Macron’s decision to rename Lecornu, France’s fourth prime minister in barely a year. France is struggling with mounting economic challenges and ballooning debt, and the political crisis is aggravating its troubles and raising alarm across the European Union.
“I don’t think there were a lot of candidates,″ Lecornu told reporters Saturday during a visit to a police station in the Paris suburb of L’Hay-les-Roses.
Lecornu, who resigned Monday after just a month on the job, said he agreed to come back because of the urgent need to find financial solutions for France. But he said he would only stay as long as ″conditions are met,″ and seemed to acknowledge the risk that he could be brought down in a no-confidence vote by the fractured parliament.
″Either political forces help me and we accompany each other ... or they won’t,″ he said.
He wouldn’t say when he expects to form a new government or who could be in it, but has said it wouldn’t include anyone angling for the 2027 presidential election. He didn’t address opposition demands to scrap a contentious law raising the retirement age.
Over the past year, Macron’s successive minority governments have collapsed in quick succession, leaving France mired in political paralysis as it faces a debt crisis that has worried markets and EU partners, and a growing poverty rate.


US threatens to pull support for UN peace mission in Abyei

Updated 14 sec ago
Follow

US threatens to pull support for UN peace mission in Abyei

US threatens to pull support for UN peace mission in Abyei
“It does not absolve authorities of their responsibility to implement their key commitments under the 2011 peace agreement,” Waltz told the Security Council
“Sudan and South Sudan must now uphold their commitment to the 2011 peace agreement”

UNITED NATIONS: The United States on Wednesday threatened to oppose the renewal of a UN peacekeeping mission to Abyei, a disputed region between war-torn Sudan and South Sudan, unless both sides uphold a 2011 peace deal.
At a UN Security Council meeting, the US ambassador laid down Washington’s conditions for renewing the mandate of the United Nations Interim Security Force for Abyei (UNISFA), which expires on November 15.
“We recognize Sudan and South Sudan are facing historic and significant internal challenges and instability. It does not absolve authorities of their responsibility to implement their key commitments under the 2011 peace agreement,” Mike Waltz told the Security Council.
“Sudan and South Sudan must now uphold their commitment to the 2011 peace agreement and UNISFA’s mandate to secure the United States support of this renewal,” he said.
To secure Washington’s support for an extended UNISFA mandate, the neighboring countries need to ensure that Abyei is a demilitarized zone, establish temporary administrative and security arrangements such as a joint Abyei police force, and determine the region’s final status, Waltz said.
Abyei’s status has remained unresolved since South Sudan gained independence and became a nation in 2011.
Clashes are frequent in the oil-rich border region between the two countries, where several thousand UN peacekeepers are deployed under UNISFA’s auspices.
Sudan is in the grips of a vicious civil war.
Abyei is supposed to be a demilitarized zone but UN officials have voiced concern about the presence of South Sudanese forces, as well as Sudanese paramilitaries from the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), who have been engaged in a power struggle in Sudan since 2023.
“The people of Abyei have been waiting 14 years for the establishment of the temporary administrative and security arrangements, including the Joint Abyei police service and a determination of Abyei’s final status,” Waltz said on Wednesday.
The inaction of Sudan and South Sudan and the deliberate undermining of the peace agreement “raises serious doubts for the United States about continuing its support for UNISFA’s mandate, unless Sudan and South Sudan demonstrate immediate and tangible progress,” the American ambassador warned.
Since President Donald Trump returned to the White House in January, the United States has been outspoken in its criticism of the UN and significantly reduced its contribution to the UN peacekeeping budget.
Leveraging their veto power on the Security Council, the Americans have in recent months pushed it to decide on ending the UN peacekeeping mission in Lebanon in 2027, and to restrict the mandate of the UN’s political mission in Colombia.