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惊险挺过两场“不信任动议”,法国总理坦言:“的确很难”
Huan Qiu Shi Bao·2025-10-16 22:43

Core Points - The French government led by Prime Minister Élisabeth Borne successfully passed its first test by surviving two no-confidence motions initiated by opposition parties [1][3] - The no-confidence motions were proposed by the left-wing party "La France Insoumise" and the far-right National Rally, but neither received the necessary majority of 289 votes in the National Assembly [3] - The failure of the no-confidence motions was attributed to the government's commitment to significant concessions on pension reforms, including a suspension of the policy in the 2026 budget to gain support from the Socialist Party [3] Group 1 - The no-confidence motion from "La France Insoumise" received 271 votes, while the National Rally's motion garnered 144 votes, both falling short of the majority needed [3] - Prime Minister Borne announced the suspension of pension reform until January 2028 and assured that the parliament would have the final say on the budget [3] - Borne acknowledged the seriousness of the situation but expressed relief that the government could now focus on its work after surviving the motions [3] Group 2 - There remains a risk for Borne's government as disagreements persist between opposition and ruling parties regarding the 2026 national budget draft [4]