James Saunders
Guest Reporter
Michel Barnier, the man who led the EU's charge against the UK in Brexit negotiations, has been appointed as prime minister of France.
The country's president, Emmanuel Macron, named Barnier in the role early on Thursday afternoon - and has tasked him with forming a new government.
The appointment immediately prompted fury in France, with hard-left politician Jean-Luc Melenchon urging his supporters to take to the streets in protest on Saturday, September 7.
While on the right, Marine Le Pen of the National Rally (RN) party ruled out being part of any Barnier-led government.
But Jordan Bardella, also from the RN, said the party would "judge his general policy speech, his budgetary decisions and his actions on the evidence... and we reserve all political means of action if this is not the case in the coming weeks."
The move forms a push by Macron to put weeks of political deadlock to bed after his hastily-called snap election handed him a hung parliament.
Macron has been trying to manage a shaky coalition of French centrists and left-wingers since the election - which took place over two rounds between late June and early July this year.
Though the left-wing New Popular Front alliance came first, Macron ruled out asking the party to form a government after other parties said they would immediately vote it down.
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In the announcement today, the president's office said Barnier's appointment had been made "with forming a unifying government to serve the country and the French people" in mind.
The new French PM, replacing the youngest-ever man to hold the role, Gabriel Attal, is known on this side of the Channel for his outspoken Brexit criticism - despite his crucial position in negotiations.
Barnier has previously declared how he has "never been enthusiastic" about Brexit - and has claimed "nobody has ever been able to show me even the tiniest bit of added value" of leaving the EU.
At the start of 2023, he had insisted that the door for Britain to rejoin the bloc "will remain open any time".
Barnier has also heaped praise on Sir Keir Starmer in the past, labelling the then-Leader of the Opposition a "European".
He told LBC last February: "I think that Keir Starmer - as many, many politicians, even in the Tory Party - knows that to face some global challenges, we have to work at a European level."
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