Welcome to the Brussels Edition. I’m Suzanne Lynch, Bloomberg’s Brussels bureau chief, bringing you the latest from the European Union each weekday. Make sure you’re signed up. France’s political drama may finally be heading towards a denouement, with President Emmanuel Macron due to name a new prime minister by this evening. As Samy Adghirini and Francois de Beaupuy report from Paris, political players aren’t the only ones jockeying to shape the shifting balance of power in France. The country’s business elite is courting the head of the Socialist party, Olivier Faure — one potential replacement for outgoing Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu. Earlier this week, Faure attended a dinner with France’s powerful business lobby AFEP, according to people familiar with the matter. Faure’s chances of being named prime minister are slim, though the Socialists have become potential kingmakers, particularly in any new government that doesn’t include the far right. The French Socialist Party’s Olivier Faure during an anti-far right demonstration in 2024. Photographer: Nathan Laine/Bloomberg Faure told the business leaders that the political instability that would result from another snap election would be much more damaging to the economy than any of the policy measures backed by the Socialists – including pausing Macron’s pension reform that raised the retirement age, according to one person who spoke on the condition of anonymity. Changes to France’s pensions laws have become a political lightning rod as Macron struggles to get a government together and prepares to name his sixth prime minister in less than two years. France is due to present its budget to parliament by Monday, piling pressure on the country’s president to make a decision. Though not formally on the agenda, the precarious situation in the EU’s second-largest economy was high on the minds of finance ministers who gathered for two days of meetings in Luxembourg. France’s caretaker finance minister, Roland Lescure, met EU Economy Commissioner Valdis Dombrovskis on the margins of the meeting, and pledged to get France’s deficit within the EU’s 3%-of-output limit by 2029. Among the officials adopting a more upbeat stance is Paschal Donohoe, who chairs the group of euro-area finance ministers. “I am confident the efforts of the French government will be successful with regard to their public spending and borrowing plans, and I also continue to be confident in the resilience and safety of the euro,” he said. However, the key test may be how markets will respond to any further slippages in government formation or another parliamentary election. |