A top advisor to French President Emmanuel Macron announced last week that he would quit, causing further chaos for Macron. The top diplomatic adviser Emmanuel Bonne told Macron he was resigning on Friday,
France’s new prime minister has hinted at plans to water down Emmanuel Macron’s controversial state pension reforms...
France faces a deep political crisis, with Macron’s government faltering amid social unrest and the far-right's rise
By Elizabeth Pineau and Michel Rose PARIS (Reuters) -French Prime Minister Francois Bayrou has told party chiefs he will not repeal President Emmanuel Macron's pension reform, a source in Macron's camp said,
French President Emmanuel Macron said on Monday that new Prime Minister Francois Bayrou will travel to China to try to make progress on a trade dispute that threatens cognac sales. Read more at straitstimes.
France’s plans to build a national memorial for victims of terrorism – originally shelved due to budget cuts – are back on track, President Emmanuel Macron has promised. The project’s proposed
Pressure on Emmanuel Macron has increased significantly since Michel Barnier was ousted as Prime Minister after barely three months in the job at the end of last year.
Storm clouds have hovered over French politics for some time now but it was in the summer of last year that the thunder really began to roll. In July, early parliamentary elections resulted in an unclear outcome because no single party won a clear majority.
François Bayrou comfortably survived his first confidence vote on Thursday, a little over one month after the veteran centrist became France’s prime minister. The January 16 vote, called by the left-wing force La France Insoumise (LFI),
French Prime Minister Francois Bayrou has opened the door to renegotiating President Emmanuel Macron’s controversial pension reform. In his general policy speech at the National Assembly, Bayrou expressed his desire to gain support from the Socialist party for the 2025 budget,
Long before Donald Trump's inauguration on January 20, the US president-elect threatened Europeans with high tariffs on their products, reduced support for Ukraine, and a reassessment of NATO's funding.
Newly appointed French Prime Minister François Bayrou survived a no-confidence vote on Thursday after the opposition Socialist Party chose not to back the motion. In the surprise turn of events, most Socialist lawmakers decided not to withdraw their confidence in Bayrou's government unlike their left-wing allies,