Extremely critical, but also concerned about how the prime minister practiced François Bairouwhose government did not receive the French National Assembly vote yesterday French media.

Indicatively, in analysis published in the newspaper Le monde The outgoing prime minister is presented as one Prime Minister without a “grace period”, immersed in scandals and Byzantineisms from the first moment. The report emphasizes its “clumsy” and “lonely” governance, with delays, errors and consensus. It should be noted that politically “falsa”, such as a proposal for referendum on pensions, removed him from allies and brought him open to President Makron and that despite the announcements and some legislation, his immobility and inability to persuade his plan to persuade him. The post sketches a Leader isolated, controversial and failed, leaving with lost trust and dubious prospects.

For its part, the newspaper Le figaro presents the Falling Bairo as a ‘predictable but historical moment’ of the fifth French Republic. He points out that many are talking about “isolation” and “impatience”, denouncing “false promises” and his “naive” choice to seek a vote of confidence without alliances, pointing out that even pro -government MPs appear to be frustrated. The post highlights the image of a leader who accepted his end, with ‘Unthinkable naivety’, and a parliamentary majority without strategy. In the background, the political atmosphere is described as “depressed”, with fears of new dismantling and only possible way out of the socialists with the rich taxation. In general, the fall of Bairou is interpreted as a symptom of chaos and amateurism in power.