Macron accepts PM's resignation but asks him to stay on
- Published
French President Emmanuel Macron has accepted the resignation of Prime Minister Gabriel Attal's government following their centrist party's defeat in parliamentary elections.
However, Mr Attal and his ministers will continue to deal with day-to-day business as a caretaker government.
A left-wing alliance that won the 7 July election has so far been unable to agree on a potential candidate to replace him.
In a statement, the Élysée Palace said President Macron had called on "republican forces to work together" to form a new government.
This would exclude the far right National Rally (RN) and the radical left France Unbowed (LFI), which is part of the left-wing alliance that won the 7 July elections.
Mr Attal made no comment to journalists as he left his government's final cabinet meeting at the Élysée Palace earlier on Tuesday, but President Macron is understood to have said the caretaker government could remain in place for "some weeks".
- Published8 July
According to French news agency AFP, Mr Attal told President Macron he would stay on out of a sense duty "until the very last minute" and "as long as you deem necessary, on the eve of major events for our country" - a remark widely interpreted as a reference to the Paris Olympics, which start in 10 days' time.
The French prime minister had already handed in his resignation the day after his Ensemble alliance came second in the snap parliamentary vote called by President Macron.
National Rally (RN) won European elections in early June but then came third in the 7 July parliamentary vote.
As no party won an outright majority, Mr Macron asked Mr Attal to stay on for the time being and then called on mainstream parties to form a coalition with a "solid" majority.
Since its election victory, the left-wing alliance has been marred by infighting. Its two biggest parties, France Unbowed (LFI) and the Socialists, have both rejected each other's candidates for prime minister.
On Monday, three of the NFP’s main parties - the Socialists, the Greens and the Communists - said they had agreed on former diplomat Laurence Tubiana as a nominee.
Ms Tubiana, 73, is head of the European Climate Foundation and led the 2015 Paris Accords on climate targets. She is also a former adviser to former Socialist President François Hollande and last week she signed an open letter from 70 intellectuals urging the NFP to work immediately with others to form a broad-based "republican programme and government".
Olivier Faure of the Socialists said that she “corresponds completely with what we’re looking for” and said she had agreed to have her name put forward.
But LFI’s Manuel Bompard said he did not consider Ms Tubiana to be a “serious” proposition.
Citing the open letter in Le Monde, Mr Bompard said that having her as prime minister would be like “letting Macron in by the backdoor”.
Many had foreseen the NFP's difficulties in agreeing on a prime ministerial candidate.
The alliance, which was hastily cobbled together after Mr Macron called snap parliamentary elections in June, brought together parties with very different views and with varying degrees of reluctance to work with Mr Macron’s centrists.
LFI in particular has a longstanding and open distrust with the Ensemble alliance, which condemns the party as extremist.
But the NFP does not have enough seats to form a credible government by itself.
Some members of Mr Macron’s alliance, such as ministers Gérald Darmanin and Aurore Bergé, have advocated working with the conservative Republican Right, who have been renamed since some of their colleagues in the old Republicans party formed an alliance with National Rally.
Mr Macron’s decision to call a snap election off the back of RN's European victory in June angered many of his allies as well as his opponents.
The French president has made no public comment since his party's defeat in the parliamentary vote.
Last week, he wrote a letter to the country in which he called on all political parties to “rise to the occasion and work together” to build a coalition.