French premier planning to use constitutional maneuver to push through 2026 budget: Report

Article 49.3 could be invoked on Tuesday after Sebastien Lecornu pledged not to use special constitutional powers

ISTANBUL

France’s premier is planning to use a constitutional maneuver to push through the 2026 budget, broadcaster BFM TV learned on Monday.

Sebastien Lecornu reportedly decided to resort to Article 49.3 to get the entire 2026 budget adopted after months of debate in the National Assembly.

Lecornu reportedly weighed the pros and cons right up to the end before making the decision.

If used, Article 49.3 could be invoked from Tuesday on the revenue section of the draft budget bill, then again days later on spending, before the text moves to the Senate and returns to the assembly for a final use of the measure.

Article 49.3 allows Lecornu to bypass a vote in the National Assembly on the budget, provided he survives a no-confidence motion. If, however, he fails to survive the motion of no-confidence, the law gets rejected and the government collapses.

Provided that Lecornu withstands the no-confidence motions throughout the process, a final budget could be passed around mid-February.

Lecornu had previously pledged not to use the Article 49.3 to force the budget through, granting lawmakers unusual freedom to reshape the bill but also raising the risk of legislative deadlock.