PARIS — French President Emmanuel Macron came out fighting Thursday in his first comments following the resignation of ousted Prime Minister Michel Barnier, a day after a historic no-confidence vote at the National Assembly left France without a functioning government.
Macron said he will serve as president ''until the end'' of his five-year term scheduled in 2027. He also said he would name a new prime minister within days, but gave no hints who that might be.
Macron laid blame at the door of his opponents on the far right for bringing down the government of Michel Barnier. He said they chose ''Not to do but to undo.'' ''They chose disorder,'' he said. The president said the far right and the far left had united in what he called ''an anti-Republican front'' and stressed: ''I won't shoulder other people's irresponsibility.''
The National Assembly ousted Barnier by 331 votes, making him the shortest-serving prime minister in modern French history. Macron faces pressure to quickly name a new leader capable of navigating a fractured parliament, where no party holds a majority.
Here is the the Latest:
Macron warns that France cannot afford stasis
Macron noted that France's constitution prevents a new round of legislative elections so soon after the last ones, meaning the country is stuck with the current National Assembly until next July at the earliest. That reality means lawmakers have a duty ''to work together, at the service of France and the French.''
''The world, Europe, are moving ahead, and we need a government that can take decisions,'' Macron said.