Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu’s government collapsed because it fell into a massive and insurmountable credibility gap from the moment it was announced. In today’s crisis-ridden France, political credibility is the most valuable asset, and the new administration was bankrupt from the start.
The first test of any new government is to establish its credibility. It must convince the political class and the public that it has the legitimacy, the competence, and the vision to lead. Lecornu’s government failed this test in spectacular fashion.
The source of this credibility gap was the “largely unchanged” nature of the cabinet. In the face of an unprecedented economic crisis, this lineup did not seem credible. It did not project the image of a team of experts and innovators ready to take drastic action. Instead, it projected a lack of seriousness and a disconnect from reality.
This initial failure was all the opposition needed. They immediately attacked the government’s credibility, widening the gap with every statement. The claim of “no legitimacy” was a direct assault on its credibility, and it hit its mark perfectly.
Once a government loses its credibility, it cannot function. It has no authority to make difficult decisions, and no one will trust its promises. Lecornu’s resignation was an admission that this credibility gap was too wide to bridge. The primary challenge for the next Prime Minister will not be policy, but passing this fundamental credibility test.
