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Gaza rescuers say Israeli forces kill over 50 as ceasefire calls mount
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France's public media reform faces strikes and heated assembly debates
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Algerian court upholds five-year jail term for French-Algerian writer Boualem Sansal
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Europe suffocates under an intense heatwave
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France shuts schools as heatwave grips Europe
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'Iranians don't trust the sky anymore, they don't trust the ground as before'
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France bans smoking in more public spaces
France
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Jury returns to deliberate for a second day at Sean 'Diddy' Combs' sex trafficking trial
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Denmark: Women now eligible for military draft

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LeMonde
24 minutes ago
- LeMonde
French PM Bayrou survives no-confidence motion
French Prime Minister Francois Bayrou on Tuesday, July 1, survived a no-confidence vote but his future hangs by a thread after barely half a year in the post. The motion of no-confidence against Bayrou's government was put forward by the Socialist Party (PS) after the collapse of talks on pension reforms. The motion received just 189 votes out of the 289 needed to bring down the government. It had broad support across the left but did not receive the backing of the far-right National Rally (RN) under Marine Le Pen. Bayrou does not have a majority in parliament's lower house, the Assemblée nationale, and the vote underscored the fragility of his position and the loss of the Socialists whose support he had until now relied on to stay in power. 'We have been betrayed' While centrist veteran Bayrou publicly dismissed the move as a "joke", he has been fuming in private, said one minister. The French prime minister, 74, "is pretty angry with the Socialist Party", said the minister on condition of anonymity. "No more leniency towards Francois Bayrou," PS leader Olivier Faure had said on Sunday. "We have been betrayed." "Censuring the government today would not benefit the French people," Le Pen told reporters earlier Tuesday. On the other hand, she added, the party will pay particular attention to the budget proposed by Bayrou's government. The far-right party has not ruled out using its leverage in parliament to vote out Bayrou, as it did with his predecessor Michel Barnier, over the 2026 budget in the autumn. Putting together the 2026 budget will be "a nightmare" given the extent of France's financial difficulties, government spokesperson Sophie Primas said in March. Bayrou was named prime minister by President Emmanuel Macron in December with a mission to bring stability following months of chaos in the wake of last summer's legislative elections. Were Bayrou to be ejected by parliament in a vote of no-confidence, it would leave Macron seeking his seventh prime minister and cast a heavy shadow over the remaining two years of his presidential mandate.


Euronews
an hour ago
- Euronews
Emmanuel Macron has first phone call with Vladimir Putin since 2022
French President Emmanuel Macron held his first phone call in three years with his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin on Tuesday, a conversation the Kremlin called "substantial." Macron's office, the Élysée Palace, said in a statement that the call, their first since September 2022, lasted two hours and that Macron had called for a ceasefire in Ukraine and the opening of negotiations to end the conflict. Putin reiterated his position to Macron that the war in Ukraine was "a direct consequence of the West's policy," which he said had "ignored Russia's security interests." Any peace agreement between Moscow and Kyiv should include a "comprehensive and long-term character" and be based on "new territorial realities," the Kremlin quoted Putin as saying. Putin has previously said Ukraine must accept Russia's annexation of swathes of its territory as part of any peace deal. Macron has said only Ukraine should decide on whether or not to cede territory. During the call, Macron's office said "the president emphasised France's unwavering support for Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity." Macron and Putin aim to continue their discussions on Ukraine and Iran, the Élysée Palace said. Macron and Putin held regular discussions around the start of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, with Macron visiting Putin in Russia in February 2022, but dialogue eventually stalled. Iran's nuclear ambitions Meanwhile, the Kremlin press service, quoting Putin, said it was necessary to respect Iran's right to the peaceful development of its nuclear programme as well as continued compliance with its obligations under the nuclear non-proliferation treaty. Macron reportedly also stressed the need for Iran to cooperate fully with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), his office said. Iran's parliament approved a bill last month suspending cooperation with the UN nuclear watchdog after Israel and the United States bombed three of Iran's nuclear sites, aiming to prevent Tehran from acquiring a nuclear weapon. Iran has maintained it is not seeking to develop nuclear weapons and that its programme is civilian and peaceful in nature. Macron "expressed his determination to seek a diplomatic solution that would lead to a lasting and rigorous resolution of the nuclear issue, the question of Iran's missiles, and its role in the region," his office said, adding that the two leaders had decided to coordinate efforts.

LeMonde
an hour ago
- LeMonde
Macron and Putin discuss Ukraine ceasefire and Iran in first talks since 2022
French President Emmanuel Macron urged Russian leader Vladimir Putin on Tuesday, July 1, to agree to a ceasefire in Ukraine "as soon as possible," as the two held their first known phone talks in over two-and-a-half years, the Elysée said. One week after a ceasefire ended Israel's 12-day war with Iran, the two men also discussed Tehran's nuclear programme, with Macron suggesting Moscow and Paris work together to de-escalate tensions. The Kremlin confirmed the conversation, but said Putin blamed the West for the conflict and said any peace deal should be "long-term." The talks lasted for more than two hours, and the two agreed to hold more contacts on Ukraine and Iran in the future, the French presidency said. Macron "emphasised France's unwavering support for Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity" and "called for the establishment, as soon as possible, of a ceasefire and the launch of negotiations between Ukraine and Russia for a solid and lasting settlement of the conflict," said an Elysée Palace statement. A Kremlin statement said Putin "reminded [Macron] that the Ukrainian conflict is a direct consequence of the policy of Western states." Putin added that Western states had "for many years ignored Russia's security interests" and "created an anti-Russian bridgehead in Ukraine." The Kremlin said Putin told the French president that any peace deal should be "comprehensive and long-term, provide for the elimination of the root causes of the Ukrainian crisis and be based on new territorial realities." 'Coordinate efforts' on Iran On Iran, "the two presidents decided to coordinate their efforts and to speak soon in order to follow up together on this issue," the French statement added. The talks came after a ceasefire last week ended a 12-day conflict between Iran and Israel. Macron has previously urged Iran to ease tensions by moving to "zero enrichment" of uranium in its nuclear programme. Macron "emphasised the urgent need" for Iran to comply with its obligations under the Nuclear Proliferation Treaty "in particular by cooperating fully with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), whose inspectors must be able to resume their work without delay," the statement said, adding: "He expressed his determination to seek a diplomatic solution that would allow for a lasting and demanding settlement of the nuclear issue, the question of Iran's missiles and its role in the region." The Kremlin said Putin emphasised "the lawful right of Tehran in developing a civilian" nuclear programme. It said both presidents agreed that the conflict over Iran's nuclear programme and other Middle Eastern conflicts should be solved "exclusively" by diplomatic means and that the two leaders would "continue contacts" on this. No calls since September 2022 The French leader tried, in a series of phone calls in 2022, to warn Putin against invading Ukraine and travelled to Moscow early that year. He kept up phone contact with Putin after the invasion, but talks then ceased, with the last call between the presidents dating back to September 2022. Macron has, over the last year, toughened his line against Russia, saying its expansionism is a threat to all of Europe. The French president has also refused to rule out putting troops on the ground in Ukraine. In April 2024, Russia's then-defence minister Sergei Shoigu and French counterpart Sébastien Lecornu, a close confidant of Macron, held talks focused on security in the run-up to the Olympic Games in Paris. That was the last official high-level contact between the two countries.