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France is Europe’s new ‘bad boy.’ Could a technocratic government save it?

With its recent political turmoil and instability, France has been compared to Italy, replacing it as the new “bad boy” of Europe.

Should France, then, take a page out of Italy’s book and consider a technocratic government?

President Emmanuel Macron is expected to pick his new prime minister by Friday evening, after outgoing PM Sebastien Lecornu led last-ditch talks for two days with political parties to try and unlock the current political deadlock.

Lecornu on Wednesday evening declared that “a majority of deputies oppose dissolution (of parliament), a platform for stability exists, a path is possible to adopt a budget by December 31st”. He concluded that “on this basis, the president of the republic will appoint a prime minister within the next 48 hours.”

But the most unexpected part came after. 

While Lecornu didn’t unveil details on the potential makeup of the new government, he made a suggestion: “Whoever it is,” they should be “completely disconnected from the presidential ambitions for 2027.”

“The situation is already difficult enough. We need to have a team that ultimately decides to roll up its sleeves and solve the country’s problems until the presidential election,” he added.

Italian lessons

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2025-10-10 03:03:24

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