The French government has abruptly postponed parliamentary debates on the 2026 state budget, signaling a potential move to force the legislation through without a vote. Debates scheduled for Friday and Monday were canceled Thursday, with discussions now pushed to Tuesday—a deadline by which the government may decide to use constitutional Article 49.3 or an executive ordinance to adopt the budget.
Compromise “Increasingly Unlikely”
Announcing the decision in the National Assembly, Minister for Relations with Parliament Laurent Panifous stated that an acceptable compromise text was becoming “increasingly unlikely.” He indicated that Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu would present proposals Friday aimed at enabling a compromise budget’s promulgation.
The budget’s second reading has faced disjointed debates since Tuesday, strengthening speculation about government intervention. Minister of Public Action and Accounts Amélie de Montchalin confirmed to lawmakers Thursday evening that “two options” remained: Article 49.3 or an ordinance.
Constitutional Controversy
The ordinance option faces sharp criticism from parliamentarians and legal experts who condemn its anti-parliamentary nature, as it requires no legislative vote. However, it offers one advantage over Article 49.3: it ensures France has a budget regardless of whether the prime minister faces a censure motion.
The government must decide before the revenue section vote, which if rejected would send the budget directly to the Senate. With fewer than 500 amendments remaining on revenue provisions Thursday afternoon and debates progressing steadily, this threshold could arrive quickly.
Political Backlash and Timeline
Prime Minister’s office sources cautiously suggested a decision might come by Tuesday, though final budget adoption wouldn’t occur “before mid-February.” A Macronist official summarized: “Everything will clarify over the weekend. I don’t see the prime minister activating anything before being able to highlight the Assembly’s inability to build a budget.”
National Assembly group president Marine Le Pen reacted sharply on social media, accusing governing coalition parties of deception: “The parties composing the common base have therefore lied, with the sole objective of preventing new legislative elections from being held.” She referenced previous denials about using ordinances and opposition to tax increases that now appear compromised.
The political maneuvering occurs against a backdrop of upcoming municipal elections, with various parties already positioning themselves for 2026 local contests while the national budget crisis unfolds.

