Lecornu asks French parliament not to use the budget to vote down his government
French prime minister Sébastien Lecornu asked lawmakers on Tuesday not to use the vote on the budget as a pretext to vote his government out. “There is no longer any pretext for a no-confidence motion,” he said.

Lecornu was addressing parliament to spell out his budget priorities, in the hope of staving off losing a no-confidence vote that would plunge France further into the political mire.
Key events
Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy revoked the citizenship of Odesa mayor Hennadiy Trukhanov on Tuesday, a source familiar with the matter told Reuters on condition of anonymity, adding that Trukhanov has Russian citizenship.
Trukhanov, who has been the mayor of Ukraine’s biggest port city since 2014, has previously denied holding Russian citizenship.
There is a live feed of Sébastien Lecornu’s speech, which will begin shortly, at the top of the blog. You may need to refresh the page to view it. Also, note that the speech will be in French with no translation in the video.
On Tuesday, Sébastien Lecornu’s new government approved a draft budget in a meeting with French president Emmanuel Macron, who warned that any vote to topple Lecornu’s cabinet would force him to dissolve parliament and call fresh elections, reports Agence France-Presse (AFP).
Macron, who has returned from a summit in Egypt on ending the Gaza war, warned during the meeting that any no-confidence motion would be tantamount to a “dissolution motion”, government spokesperson Maud Bregeon said.
All eyes will be on the premier from 1pm GMT (2pm BST) when he gives his policy speech in parliament, especially to see if he will suspend a deeply unpopular pensions reform.
The hard-left France Unbowed party and far-right National Rally have already filed motions to topple Lecornu’s new cabinet.
The Socialists have said they will not back those motions, giving them little chance of succeeding, but will file their own if Lecornu does not immediately suspend a reform that raised the retirement age from 62 to 64.
UN says Russia struck aid convoy in southern Ukraine
Russian forces struck a UN aid convoy in the partially occupied southern Kherson region of Ukraine on Tuesday, Kyiv and the UN said, adding there were no casualties in the attack.
The United Nations said its convoy of four vehicles was clearly marked and came under attack from Russian drones and artillery while delivering aid to the frontline town of Bilozerka.
The UN’s humanitarian coordinator for Ukraine Matthias Schmale said:
Such attacks are utterly unacceptable. Aid workers are protected by international humanitarian law and should never be attacked.
He added that two World Food Programme (WFP) trucks were damaged in the strike, while local authorities said the remaining two were unscathed.
The UN’s sexual and reproductive health agency, UNFPA, told Agence France-Presse (AFP) the convoy was carrying 800 individual packages “containing essential items for older persons, women and girls”. Jacqueline Mahon, UNFPA representative to Ukraine, told AFP:
The area has a very high proportion of older people, many of whom are unable to relocate due to drones and shelling and rely on humanitarian assistance for survival.
Ukrainian foreign minister Andriy Sybiga called the strike “another brutal violation of international law, proving Russia’s utter disregard for civilian lives and its international obligations”.
There was no immediate reaction from Moscow.
A senior official in the Kherson region, Oleksandr Prokudin, published a photo showing a white truck marked with the WFP emblem on fire with plumes of black smoke rising above it.
Regional authorities said on Tuesday that three people had been killed by Russian artillery in the region’s largest town, also called Kherson. One more civilian was killed by a small drone attack on a car in the nearby town of Nikopol.
Moldova’s pro-European ruling party will nominate financier Alexandru Munteanu to be the country’s new prime minister, the head of the party, Igor Grosu, said on social media on Tuesday.
Munteanu, an economist who also founded an investment firm, has not previously held political office.
Incumbent prime minister Dorin Recean, in office since February 2023, said on Monday he would step down and leave politics.
President Maia Sandu’s Party of Action and Solidarity (PAS) clinched a majority in parliament after the 28 September election, and will appoint a new government in coming weeks tasked with taking former Soviet republic Moldova further out of Russia’s orbit.
The French economist Philippe Aghion, named one of the three winners of the 2025 Nobel Prize in Economics on Monday, said he hoped a path out of France’s budget mess could be found. “I hope there will be a compromise because the tragedy for France is to experience political instability,” he told reporters in Paris, according to Reuters.
“If there is another censure, it would be dramatic for France. Our interest rates would continue to rise, our spread would continue to rise, it would be dramatic. We must absolutely avoid censure and still arrive at a budget.”
Sébastien Lecornu met his new cabinet to discuss France’s draft 2026 budget that lawmakers will examine over the next 70 days.
Far-right leader Marine Le Pen’s National Rally and the far-left France Unbowed have already submitted no-confidence motions which will be debated on Thursday.
With less than two years before the next presidential election, National Rally is urging Emmanuel Macron to call another early parliamentary vote while France Unbowed wants the president to step down.
The two parties do not hold enough seats to topple Lecornu’s government on their own, but the prime minister, who is speaking to the National Assembly shortly, could be undone if the Socialist party and Green lawmakers join forces with them.
To win them over, he may be forced to abandon an unpopular pension reform that was one of Macron’s signature policies in his second presidential term. Rammed through parliament without a vote in 2023 despite mass protests, the pension change gradually raises the retirement age from 62 to 64.
Lecornu attempts to rally French cabinet before addressing parliament
French prime minister Sébastien Lecornu told his new cabinet on Tuesday that the political crisis the country is going through is not yet a regime crisis, government spokesperson Maud Bregeon said on Tuesday.
She said that Lecornu had also said that “we are capable of taking action, but the government will not do just anything”.
Lecornu will address parliament on Tuesday afternoon to spell out his budget priorities, hoping to win over enough Socialists to stave off losing a no-confidence vote that would plunge France further into the political mire.

Jennifer Rankin
Thousands of workers are marching through Brussels, after unions called a national strike that has grounded planes and stopped much public transport in the Belgian capital.
Belgium has experienced several national and sectoral strikes since a new right-leaning government took office in February pledging to cut spending, in order to curb the country’s spiralling debt.
Union leaders said they expected 120,000 people to join the demonstration through the centre of Brussels on Tuesday, to protest against pensions reforms, plans to reduce night-working bonuses and protect Belgium’s automatic indexation of wages to prices.
Teachers who work for the Brussels-Wallonia government, which is responsible for overseeing education policy in the French regions, are also on strike over money-saving proposals, including a two-hour increase in the secondary school working week.
Local TV showed a deserted check-in zone at Brussels international airport, where all flights due to depart and half of those bound for landing were cancelled, after staff who do security screening walked out. In Brussels, many buses, trams and metro lines were suspended, but the national rail service continued to function.
The Belgian General Federation of Labour (FGTB) union, which claims 1.4m members in a country of 11.8m, is protesting against planned pension reforms that would mean people would lose some money if they took early retirement at the age of 62.
A major speech where Belgium’s prime minister Bart De Wever will set out his policy priorities for the year ahead, which was due on Tuesday, has been delayed by one week, as his five-party government has so far failed to find agreement on €10bn spending cuts or new revenues, local media reported.
Belgium is required by EU law to reduce its government deficit and debt, while also meeting a Nato pledge to raise defence spending.