
By Stefan J. Bos, Chief International Correspondent Worthy News
PARIS (Worthy News) – French President Emmanuel Macron has accepted the resignation of Prime Minister Gabriel Attal’s government, ushering in a period of political instability ahead of the Olympic Games in Paris.
Attal’s cabinet will now serve “in a caretaker capacity” and “handle day-to-day business until a new government is named,” the Elysee Palace said Tuesday.
Macron’s centrist Ensemble alliance was beaten by the New Popular Front (NFP), a broad coalition of leftist and environmental parties, in early elections earlier this month.
However, the outcome surprised the anti-migration National Rally, where champagne was on ice after polls suggested an election victory.
For days, Marine Le Pen had confidently predicted that her party would triumph with an outright majority and her protege Jordan Bardella would be prime minister.
Instead, the National Rally became third after tactical dealmaking between centrist and leftist opponents who pulled candidates to avoid splitting the anti-National Rally vote.
CLEANING UP IMAGE
Le Pen had sought to clean up her party’s image as extreme and far-right while still tapping the grievances of voters angry over immigration from mainly Islamic nations, living costs, and strained public services.
The vote left the National Assembly with no dominant political bloc in power for the first time in France’s modern republic history. A coalition government has yet to be formed between alliances or political parties.
Until a government is formed, Attal’s caretaker government will run current affairs in the eurozone’s second-largest economy. Officials said its role will also ensure that the Olympic Games, which start on July 26, run smoothly.
The caretaker government cannot submit new laws to parliament or make significant changes.
Attal, 34, was appointed as France’s prime minister in January. He rose to prominence during the COVID-19 pandemic and served as France’s education minister before becoming the prime minister.
As education minister, his first move was to ban the Muslim abaya dress in state schools last year, making him popular among conservatives in France.
‘BUILDING STRONG VALUES’
“The school of the Republic was built around strong values; secularism is one of them,” he stressed.
“When you enter a classroom, you shouldn’t be able to identify the religion of pupils,” Attal said in an interview at the time.
“I announce that [pupils] will no longer be able to wear abaya at school,” Attal explained at the time
The abaya is a long, flowing dress commonly worn by Muslim women. It complies with Islamic beliefs on modest dress. However, experts say other communities in North Africa and the Middle East also wear it.
In 2004, France already banned religious symbols in schools, including large crosses, Jewish kippahs, and Islamic headscarves.
The focus on abayas followed a reported increase in girls wearing Islamic clothing in French schools, a trend that critics say undermines the country’s historic Christian traditions.
(With additional reporting and analysis from the Worthy News Europe Bureau)
Copyright 1999-2025 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
Latest News from Worthy News
After a grueling overnight session stretching into the early hours of Tuesday morning, the House Rules Committee voted 8–4 along party lines to advance a bill aimed at ending the longest government shutdown in U.S. history — now entering its 42nd day. The measure, supported by all Republicans on the panel, moves next to the full House for a vote Wednesday, where GOP leaders are confident it will pass.
French President Emmanuel Macron announced Tuesday that France will assist the Palestinian Authority (PA) in drafting a constitution for a future Palestinian state, following a meeting with PA President Mahmoud Abbas at the Élysée Palace. The move comes as part of France’s broader push to promote a two-state solution after recognizing a Palestinian state at the United Nations in September.
Venezuela has launched a massive two-day military mobilization involving nearly 200,000 troops as the USS Gerald R. Ford, the world’s largest aircraft carrier, arrived in Latin American waters Tuesday, significantly escalating regional military tensions.
Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said he was “deeply saddened” after a Turkish military cargo plane carrying 20 personnel crashed Tuesday in Georgia, near the border with Azerbaijan, and officials feared there were no survivors.
Europe marked the end of World War I with mixed emotions Tuesday, realizing that the armed conflict in Ukraine increasingly resembles the horrors of that era.
A high court in Pakistan has ordered the release “on bail” of a Christian woman who spent more than a year in prison on what rights activists say were false accusations of blasphemy against Islam.
Disgraced former French President Nicolas Sarkozy says he will prove his innocence after a court agreed to temporarily release him from the prison where he began serving a five-year sentence on October 21, 2025, following a conviction for “criminal conspiracy” linked to alleged Libyan campaign funding.