
Macron in survival, France in revolt; while Europe trembles from the coming crises...
France, one of the traditional pillars of Western democracy, is immersed in a rare crisis that is not merely political, but existential.
The fall of the Bayrou government is not an ordinary parliamentary event, it is a powerful alarm for an entire system.
In a country with a republican history and institutional stability, when a prime minister is ousted by a vote of no confidence from a parliament without a majority and without vision, we are not dealing with a government crisis, but with a systemic failure of the political contract between the leadership and the people.
Bayrou failed not only as a leader, but as a symbol of that arrogant technocracy that seeks to save the economy with "belt tightening", without listening to the cries of the street. While public debt goes over 114% of GDP and the deficit exceeds any norm, the establishment demands "unity" from a people that no longer has either faith or patience.
President Macron, who once emerged as France's "male Merkel," today looks more like a crisis manager, caught between political rivals and frustrated European partners.
Who will stop France's slide into chaos?
There is no vision on the horizon, only political calculations to maintain power. Protests grow, extremes grow, radicals awaken, while the political center dissolves like salt in water. A new government may emerge, but without real legitimacy. And if Macron decides to go the route of a referendum or resignation, we will have a repeat of 1969, but this time without a De Gaulle.
Is this the France that once exported revolutions, ideals, and civilization?
Today, it exports uncertainty.
This crisis is not just French. It is a warning for Italy, Germany, Spain, and perhaps even the Balkans. Because when the system clashes the interests of the elite with the reality of the people, the scenes of Paris can become the scenes of Brussels, Athens... or even Tirana./ Pamphlet
Lini një Përgjigje