On October 5, the French Presidential Palace announced the first list of members for the new government, with several key ministers retaining their positions while the Defense Minister and Minister of Economy and Finance were replaced. The remaining members of the new government will be announced in the coming days.
The Secretary-General of the French Presidential Palace announced that evening that, based on the recommendation of the new Prime Minister, President Macron appointed 18 government members, including 16 ministers and 2 ministerial representatives.
According to the appointments, several important ministerial positions were retained, including the Minister of the Interior, Minister of Foreign Affairs, Minister of Justice, Minister of Education, and Minister of Culture.
Additionally, Bruno Le Maire was appointed as Defense Minister, replacing the former minister who had been promoted to Prime Minister; Roland Lescure was appointed as Minister of Economy and Finance, and Eric Woerth was appointed as Minister of Territorial Development and Decentralization.
According to French media reports, the new Prime Minister will present the new government’s general policy to the National Assembly and Senate next week, after which the remaining ministerial representative appointments will be announced. President Macron is scheduled to hold the first new cabinet meeting on October 6.
Following the announcement of the first list of new government members, leaders from both the far-right National Rally party and the far-left “France Unbowed” party criticized the new government members on social media, stating that they merely represented a “continuation” of the previous government without substantial changes.
On September 8, the former Prime Minister was forced to resign after failing to pass a confidence vote in the National Assembly due to controversy and opposition surrounding the proposed 2026 austerity budget draft. The budget proposal was subsequently shelved. The former Defense Minister was appointed as the new Prime Minister the following day.