To display this content from YouTube, you must enable advertisement tracking and audience measurement.

One of your browser extensions seems to be blocking the video player from loading. To watch this content, you may need to disable it on this site.

 'Even people close to Macron don’t really understand what he is doing' © France 24

08:46

Issued on: 09/10/2025 - 12:22Modified: 09/10/2025 - 12:29

As France wrestles with an unwieldy political class, spiralling economic crisis and unraveling political order, German MEP Rasmus Andresen, Green Party and ECON member, views the country’s political and economic crises not as an insular French problem, but as a European one. The old model, of a presidency able to command majorities, is no longer sustainable in an ultrafragmented party landscape. The inability to seek compromise and collaborate across ideological divides has considerably weakened governance across the board. With France as a linchpin in the EU’s economy, its instability risks contagion: financial markets, deficit pressures, and far‑right ambitions all amplify external vulnerability. Mr. Andresen warns that France must find a new politics of compromise, or risk pushing Europe into a deeper spiral of polarisation, uncertainty and instability.

Keywords for this article