A deputy suggests a “self-dissolution” of the Assembly to “unblock the situation”

A deputy suggests a “self-dissolution” of the Assembly to “unblock the situation”
A deputy suggests a “self-dissolution” of the Assembly to “unblock the situation”

With Michel Barnier's government censored, finds itself in the same situation as before his appointment as Prime Minister last September. That is to say, ungovernable since there is still no majority in the National Assembly. But this time, the President of the Republic will not be able to beat around the bush for a thousand years before appointing a new head of government, the country must imperatively have a budget for 2025. Faced with this puzzle, a deputy maybe the solution.

Even if Emmanuel Macron quickly finds a successor to Michel Barnier, nothing says that he will not be censored by the Assembly in the process. Certainly, he could find a name that would achieve, if not unanimity, at least consensus. It's hot. The option would therefore be to dissolve the Assembly again, so that a real majority emerges from early legislative elections. Except that it's not possible before next July.

In the absence of dissolution, a collective resignation

So Stéphane Vojetta, independent member of the French Abroad, introduced the idea of ​​“self-dissolution” to X. According to him, “the collective resignation of the 577 deputies who form the National Assembly is an unblocking option that no one mentions,” he laments. Indeed, a collective resignation of all deputies is, in practice, equivalent to a dissolution. Emmanuel Macron would thus be required to organize early legislative elections between 30 days and three months after self-dissolution.

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Stéphane Vojetta believes that this is the only solution if the deputies prove “unable to bring about a majority coalition by Christmas”. This task would therefore fall to the French, obliged to return to the polls to elect new deputies. Except that in this scenario, nothing says that the result will not be the same as after the early legislative elections which followed the dissolution, last June.

France

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