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New French PM vows profound break with past

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Protesters sit on the road to bloack a roundabout as they take part in a demonstration of the "Bloquons tout" ("Let's block everything") protest movement, in Bayonne, southwestern France, on September 10, 2025. The broad anti-government campaign, dubbed "Bloquons tout" ("Let's block everything"), calls for a a shutdown of France on September 10 with a string of protest actions and civil disobedience around the country, while the handover of power between the new Prime Minister and his predecessor, who suffered a crushing loss in a confidence vote on September 8, is scheduled for the same day at noon. (Photo by Gaizka IROZ / AFP)

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PARIS: France’s new Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu promised a “profound break” with the past on Wednesday as he faced trying to build a government with enough parliamentary support to pull the country out of a political crisis.

Lecornu’s first day on the job coincided with street protests across France in a show of grassroots opposition to President Emmanuel Macron, which resulted in clashes with police, with one protester hospitalised after being tear-gassed.

But the protests, which gathered steam on social media under the “block everything” slogan, had an uneven impact across the country, despite turnout surpassing that of the traditional Labour Day rallies on May 1.

Altogether some 197,000 demonstrators took to the streets, while the some 80,000 officers sent to control them made around 540 arrests with 415 people taken into police custody, according to interior ministry figures,

The president appointed Lecornu — a close Macron ally and defence minister for the past three years — late on Tuesday, only 24 hours after his predecessor Francois Bayrou lost a confidence vote in parliament over an attempt to implement austerity measures to reduce France’s debt.

Taking over from 74-year-old Bayrou, Lecornu, 39, promised to find “more creative” ways to work with opposition parties. “We will get there,” he said during a handover ceremony.

Lecornu — the seventh prime minister since Macron took office in 2017, and the third inside a year — faces the urgent challenge of giving France a budget for 2026 without suffering the same fate as Bayrou, who lasted just nine months before being ousted in a no-confidence vote.

Lecornu said he would address the nation “in the coming days”, insisting his approach would be different from the past.

Since Macron dissolved parliament last year, successive governments have lacked a majority in the National Assembly, putting them in constant danger of being voted out. – AFP

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