December 16, 2024
French Far Right’s Threat to Topple Barnier Deepens Crisis #FrenchFinance

French Far Right’s Threat to Topple Barnier Deepens Crisis #FrenchFinance

CashNews.co

(Bloomberg) — The far-right National Rally indicated in the strongest language yet that it could topple the French government as soon as this week, hours after Finance Minister Antoine Armand said his administration wouldn’t be blackmailed.

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Marine Le Pen and her party have threatened to support a no-confidence motion unless Prime Minister Michel Barnier tweaks his 2025 budget to index pensions to inflation among other asks. Le Pen told Barnier he needs to make the changes by Monday, which is when opposition lawmakers are expected to initiate the process to call the vote of no-confidence.

Even though Armand told Bloomberg Television in a Sunday interview that “the French government doesn’t take ultimatums” and that “we won’t be blackmailed,” National Rally President Jordan Bardella increased the rhetoric early Monday.

“The National Rally will activate the censure vote unless of course there is a last minute miracle,” Bardella told RTL radio. “If Barnier changes his text between now and 3 p.m., but I’ve got little hope he’ll see the light given we’ve been ignored and scorned for several months.”

French equity index CAC 40 sank 1.1% on Monday, with banking shares among the biggest drops. The CAC is a rare developed-market underperformer in 2024, down 5% so far this year, a consequence of political turmoil.

Bond investors have punished France’s sovereign debt relative to its peers amid the political brinkmanship in Paris, pushing borrowing costs at one point last week as high as Greece’s and leading Barnier to warn of a “storm” in financial markets. The political difficulties and market jitters began in June when President Emmanuel Macron called snap elections in a bid to bring clarity in a National Assembly where his party was already short of an outright majority.

Le Pen, who heads the single biggest party in the National Assembly, already scored a victory last week after Barnier agreed to abandon raising taxes on electricity, one of the National Rally’s key demands. This emboldened the far-right party to add to its demands. A no-confidence vote could happen as soon as Wednesday.

The euro slipped as much as 0.8% to around $1.0496.

“The French political turmoil is certainly not helping the euro,” said Rodrigo Catril, strategist at National Australia Bank Ltd. in Sydney. “An actual collapse of the government via a successful vote of no confidence would add another layer of uncertainty.”

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