It’s begun! pic.twitter.com/VqO2s06qjZ
— The Great Martis (@great_martis) October 6, 2025
France will implode first.
Croissant? pic.twitter.com/WAAeUN6RXu
— The Great Martis (@great_martis) October 6, 2025
BREAKING:
The French government just collapsed
— Visegrád 24 (@visegrad24) October 6, 2025
French Prime Minister has resigned again
After just two weeks in power, he was unable to form a new government and has just announced his resignation.
France is once again plunged into a new political crisis.
Mounting debts and interest rates combined with an executive that refuses to stand down or take any responsibility for the catastrophic financial, social or politlal situation of the country.
France is one of the largest economies in Europe and a keystone to holding the EU monetary union together.
BREAKING
French Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu resigns.
France’s fifth government in three years collapses just 12 hours after being appointed.https://t.co/TSrAGVxfnX— #LibLabCon betray you. Don’t vote for ANY of them. (@CllrBSilvester) October 6, 2025
After less than a month on the job, Lecornu submitted his government’s resignation. The 39-year-old had Sunday evening named key Cabinet ministers to their posts, but opposition parties and former minority coalition partners reacted with fury.
Many of the ministers were either holdovers from the last government or had previously served in high-level posts.
President Emmanuel Macron faces unappetizing options going forward. He could appoint yet another prime minister — effectively prolonging the crisis — call snap elections, or resign himself.
Financial markets took the news badly. The benchmark French stock index slumped as much as 3 percent, while the French government’s 10-year borrowing costs climbed to 3.57 percent, a whisker short of their highest level for the year.
Lecornu earns the dubious distinction of being the shortest-lived prime minister of the Fifth Republic, which was founded in 1958.
https://www.politico.eu/article/france-political-crisis-sebastien-lecornu/
Can not work anymore bond yields will continue to rise.
The party is over.— Frankie8523 (@frankie85297569) October 6, 2025