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By Elizabeth Pineau and Dominique Vidalon
PARIS (Reuters) – France’s caretaker prime minister on Wednesday said he saw a path to forming a new government but that the “final stretch” would be difficult, adding that it was possible France could have a new premier in the next 48 hours.
Sebastien Lecornu, France’s fifth prime minister in two years, tendered his and his government’s resignation on Monday, just hours after announcing the cabinet line-up, making it the shortest-lived administration in modern France.
But at President Emmanuel Macron’s request, Lecornu has held further consultations with political leaders spanning the centre left to centre right in an effort to defuse the crisis and avoid snap parliamentary elections.
“I told the President of the Republic … that I believe the situation allows for (him) to name a prime minister in the next 48 hours,” Lecornu told France 2 after briefing Macron on his talks.
Macron has this week faced calls to hold a snap parliamentary elections or resign, in particular from far-right and hardleft politicians but also from some in the political mainstream. Lecornu said his talks with other parties showed there was a majority in parliament against a snap election.
Markets have taken fright at the political paralysis in the euro zone’s second biggest economy, with investors already jittery over the country’s yawning budget deficit.
However, French assets saw some improvement on Wednesday after Lecornu expressed cautious optimism over the possibility of a deal in the morning, with Paris’ CAC 40 index up 1.1% on the day. The French benchmark remains one of Europe’s laggards in 2025.
Ahead of Lecornu’s remarks, French bonds outperformed their euro zone peers on the possibility that the country’s parliament may agree a budget by the end of the year.
It was unclear when Macron would announce any decisions.
Lecornu made clear he would not be the next prime minister. He declined to say who might be the next prime minister, or what their political leaning would likely be, stressing that this was up to Macron to decide.
(Writing by Ingrid Melander; Additional reporting by Benoit Van Overstraeten, Inti Landauro, Makini Brice, Sudip Kar-Gupta, Zhifan Liu, Alessandro Parodi, Amanda Cooper, Alun John; Editing by Gareth Jones)
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