France's newly-appointed Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu reacts as he speaks at the end of the handover ceremony at the Hotel Matignon in Paris on Wednesday 10 September 2025; Credit: Reuters/Ludovic Marin

PARIS (Reuters) - Fitch's downgrade of France's credit rating on Friday 12 September 2025, has cast a pall over newly installed Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu as he begins talks to draft a budget, while unions prepare strikes over spending cuts and employers threaten protests against tax hikes.

Citing political instability and rising debt, Fitch cut its rating late Friday to A+ from AA-, giving France its lowest credit score on record just days after President Emmanuel Macron tapped Lecornu to be his fifth prime minister in two years.

Although analysts said it was largely expected, the timing could hardly be worse. Fitch's downgrade fires the starting gun on a complex sprint to present a first draft of the 2026 budget to parliament by Tuesday 7 October 2025, with a possible extension until Monday 13 October 2025.

Lecornu faces a near-impossible task to make the cuts demanded by investors growing impatient with France's spending, while also winning over three ideologically distinct parliamentary blocs with differing views on how to cut the budget.

He also faces pressure from the streets. Unions have called for nationwide strikes on Thursday 18 September to protest against Lecornu's plans to reduce the budget deficit - the euro zone's biggest at 5.4% of output this year.  

On Saturday 13 September 2025, in his first interviews since taking office, Lecornu said he would scrap his predecessor's unpopular plans to eliminate two public holidays and said he was open to discussing higher taxes on the wealthy.

The Socialists are demanding a wealth tax on the ultra-rich as a condition for not voting to topple his government. The head of the MEDEF employers federation, Patrick Martin, said on Saturday they would mobilise in mass against any such project.

A major tax hike could also alienate the conservative Republicans, whose leader, outgoing Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau, said the Socialists' demands would "only make matters worse" in already high-tax France.

With France's borrowing costs rising over concerns about France's ability to control its deficit, the budget would have to put public finances on a "healthy trajectory", Lecornu said.

"The future budget may not fully reflect my convictions ... In fact, that's almost certain!" he added, urging "frank and high-level parliamentary discussions" with the Socialists, Greens and Communists.

Lecornu gave few indications of his budget priorities, other than saying he wanted to give local governments more power and cut down on the layers of bureaucracy. 

Meanwhile, the far-right National Rally's Marine Le Pen renewed pressure on Macron to call new parliamentary elections - an idea he has rejected so far. Party leader Jordan Bardella said Lecornu must show a clear break with past policies or face a vote against his government.