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French government collapses after budget vote, Le Pen demands elections

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France’s government collapsed Monday after Prime Minister François Bayrou lost a high-stakes confidence vote tied to his budget plan. Marine Le Pen quickly seized the moment, calling for fresh elections to resolve the deep political gridlock.

Key Details:

  • Bayrou’s budget plan proposed tax hikes on high earners, welfare cuts, and fewer public holidays to address soaring deficits.
  • The National Assembly voted 364–194 against Bayrou, making him the first prime minister of the Fifth Republic to be ousted in a confidence vote he initiated.
  • Le Pen called for new elections, saying: “A president is never wrong to rely on the people… The dissolution is not a whim; it is an institutional lever.”

Diving Deeper:

On Monday the French government under Prime Minister François Bayrou collapsed following a crushing defeat in the National Assembly. Bayrou, who staked his premiership on a budget plan aimed at curbing France’s spiraling debt, lost a confidence vote by a wide margin, 364 to 194. The collapse marks the fourth-shortest tenure of a French prime minister in modern history, just 269 days in office.

The crisis traces back to President Emmanuel Macron’s decision last summer to forge a fragile pact between his centrist coalition and the leftist New Popular Front (NFP) to block Marine Le Pen’s surging National Rally. That maneuver left the Assembly fractured into three camps, none with the power to govern effectively.

Macron first tapped former Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier as prime minister, but his government imploded in just three months after pushing through budget measures without parliamentary approval. Bayrou, a longtime Macron ally, was brought in as a stabilizing figure but quickly found himself boxed in by both the left and Le Pen’s populist right.

Facing EU pressure over rising debt and fears of a credit downgrade, Bayrou proposed painful austerity: raising taxes on the wealthy, cutting welfare, and even reducing the number of public holidays. Neither the left nor the National Rally would support him. Cornered, Bayrou dared parliament to bring him down, declaring: “Ladies and gentlemen, you have the power to overthrow the government, but you do not have the power to erase reality… Expenses will continue to increase even more and the weight of the debt, already unbearable, will become increasingly heavy and more expensive.”

The gamble failed. With his resignation expected Tuesday, President Macron must now decide whether to attempt a third prime ministerial appointment or dissolve parliament and call new elections. The left is lobbying for one of their own, but Marine Le Pen is pushing for a national vote.

“A president is never wrong to rely on the people,” Le Pen told the Assembly. “If there is a dissolution, we will accept the verdict of the polls. If the people do us the honour of a clear mandate… we will go to Matignon to implement, without waiting for the presidential election, a national recovery program.”

Le Pen and her allies also blasted Bayrou’s record, with party stalwart Eric Ciotti branding him a “pyromaniac firefighter” who, alongside Macron, has presided over “the French debacle.”

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Censorship Industrial Complex

UK’s top cop wants to ‘stop policing tweets’: report

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From LifeSiteNews

By Frank Wright

‘I don’t believe we should be policing toxic culture wars debates,’ said Sir Mark Rowley, chief of the London Metropolitan Police.

In a remarkable shift, Britain’s most senior police officer is to recommend changes to the law which could allow police to “stop policing tweets” within weeks.

Sir Mark Rowley, chief of London’s Metropolitan Police, said he will approach the Home Secretary with proposals which could see police return to policing real-life crime.

Sources close to Rowley told the UK’s Daily Telegraph:

He wants Shabana Mahmood, the new Home Secretary, to change the rules so police officers are not required to record or investigate complaints when there is no evidence the suspect intended real-world harm.

The change would be a remarkable departure from the crackdown on “non-crime hate incidents,” which have seen British people given sentences of several years for remarks made online.

Rowley’s move to change the law comes alongside the UK Labour government’s proposal to introduce digital ID – which could tie access to bank accounts and work to online speech.

Return to common sense policing?

The Telegraph’s source said Rowley “is proposing a shake-up of legislation that would give officers greater discretion to use ‘common sense’ when deciding whether to record and investigate complaints about comments on social media.”

The proposed change follows the arrest of comedy writer Graham Linehan, prompting the Metropolitan Police Chief to respond.

Responding to Linehan’s arrest, Rowley said on September 3 that a return to common sense was needed as a series of high-profile arrests over “non-crime hate incidents” was undermining public trust in the police.

He said the policies of successive governments had left the police in an “impossible position” over hate speech laws.

“[O]fficers are currently in an impossible position. I have offered to provide suggestions to the Home Office on where the law and policy should be clarified.”

Telegraph journalist Allison Pearson, who was doorstepped by police last November for a tweet described as a “non-crime hate incident,” responded on September 9 by saying Rowley’s step towards defending free speech was “disingenuous” at best.

“At the risk of being arrested,” Pearson said, “I suggest Met chief Mark Rowley is a total muppet.”

Commenting on the recent arrest of comedian Graham Linehan for online speech, she added, “It is disingenuous in the extreme for the commissioner to say officers’ hands are tied in cases like that of Graham Linehan.”

Pearson explains that Linehan, famous for writing sitcoms, was arrested by five armed police after a “notorious trans activist” reported his tweets to police.

Rowley’s claim is that guidelines to police compel them to treat such appeals as crime reports, leaving no room for discretion.

Pearson then refers to the many real-life crimes to which British police do not routinely respond – even over decades:

It’s perfectly clear that the police have discretion to ignore complaints, even crimes, if they want to. Let’s see now:

Phone theft – ignored.

Shoplifting – essentially legal.

Carjacking – we’ll send you a crime number.

Burglaries – help yourself, lads!

Sexual harassment, child gang rape – er, sorry, cultural sensitivities.

Pearson concludes that the police chief is himself being dishonest – at best – in saying that speech crime laws tie the hands of officers.

For Sir Mark to claim that his officers were unable to use their common sense and ignore a complaint from a notorious trans activist about [Linehan] is to insult the public’s intelligence.

Baronness Winterbourne of the House of Lords responded, recommending that “[i]nstead of blaming Parliament for your officers’ inability to think for themselves intelligently, perhaps you might firmly tell them, please, to stop being stupid.”

As the latest Telegraph report shows, government advice to police already exists – which has not prevented the policing of so-called “non-crime hate incidents.”

More than 13,200 non-crime hate incidents were recorded by police in the 12 months to June 2024, a similar number to the previous year, despite new guidelines requiring police to investigate only ‘when it is absolutely necessary and proportionate and not simply because someone is offended.’

Rowley was also recorded on a UK radio show defending the officers who carried out Linehan’s arrest.

Graham Linehan’s case is but one of many in which British people have been prosecuted for online speech. As the Free Speech Union reported in April 2025, new data showed that over 12,000 people in Britain are arrested for speech crimes every year.

Hitchens: Disband the police?

Peter Hitchens, a veteran conservative commentator and staunch Christian, spoke out on GB News – calling for the British police to be completely abolished and replaced.

Hitchens, a devout Christian, said the British police should be “disbanded” as they have become a “sinister menace to the freedom of speech.”

“They’re not responsible for crime anymore,” Hitchens explained. “They’re a politically correct body who think they’re policing thought.”

He told GB News’ Michelle Dewberry that “the police don’t believe they should be doing what we think they should be doing. They do believe they should be arresting people for incorrect tweets. The only solution is to disband them and start again.”

Elsewhere Hitchens argued this was no novel development, saying this “new style of policing” went back 20 years.

Two-tier Keir Starmer

The embattled Prime Minister Keir Starmer has long been accused of “two-tier” policing in cracking down on “far-right thugs” who commit online speech crimes.

As the murder of Charlie Kirk focuses attention on the toxic speech of the left, Britain’s justice system sees no evil when left-wingers call for the collective murder of people on the right.

Whilst former Conservative councilor Lucy Connolly received a 31-month sentence for an angry tweet about illegal migrants, a councilor for Starmer’s own Labour Party was found not guilty of incitement to violence after demanding that everyone he saw as “far right” be murdered.

Ricky Jones was declared innocent after publicly calling for his comrades to “cut the throats” of the so-called “disgusting Nazi fascists” who were protesting over the murder of children by a man of migrant heritage. Three girls were killed in Southport by a Rwandan youth last July. After stabbing the nine children in a frenzied assault, Axel Rudakubana told police, “It’s a good thing those children are dead.”

When angry protests broke out at the murders, Jones responded on video, saying of the so-called “far-right” protesters: “We need to cut all their throats and get rid of them all.”

Jones was freed, Connolly was jailed.

Despite the obvious dangers in preferring the policing of speech to genuine threats and crimes, there seems to be no cause for concern from the point of view of Britain’s prime minister.

During Wednesday afternoon’s questions, Sir Keir Starmer was asked whether he would commit to revising speech laws to “ensure legitimate free expression is protected.”

Starmer replied with a stock response: “I’ve been clear throughout, we must ensure the police focus on the most serious issues and the issues that matter most to our constituencies and all communities.”

He ended by saying he was proud of Britain’s long history of free speech, which he said he would always protect.

“And that includes tackling issues like antisocial behavior, knife crime and violence. And we have a long history of free speech in this country. I’m very proud of that, and I will always defend it.”

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Crime

FBI offering $100,000 reward for information leading to arrest of Charlie Kirk Assassin

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From The Center Square

By 

The Utah Department of Public Safety has released photos depicting the person of interest connected to the fatal shooting of conservative activist Charlie Kirk.

Although law enforcement uncovered the rifle used to kill Kirk during a Wednesday event at Utah Valley University, a manhunt for the shooter remains ongoing. Authorities had initially detained two individuals at different times following the shooting but released them after determining neither was involved.

Authorities in Utah are looking for this man in relation to Wednesday’s assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk.

State of Utah with permission

The two blurry images, circulated by Utah DPS Thursday, depict what appears to be a white male wearing sunglasses, a hat, and dark clothing. Authorities have not officially confirmed the person of interest’s race, sex, or age.

Utah DPS is encouraging anyone with information on the person to call 1-800-CALL-FBI or submit digital media tips to https://tips.fbi.gov/digitalmedia/f4507712a3b2893.

The FBI is also offering up to $100,000 for “information leading to the identification and arrest of the individual(s) responsible for the murder of Charlie Kirk.”

Authorities in Utah are looking for this man in relation to the Wednesday assassination of Charlie Kirk.

State of Utah with permission

The 31-year-old Turning Point USA founder and ally of President Donald Trump took a bullet to the neck while speaking at his “American Comeback Tour” on UVU’s campus. He was pronounced dead shortly thereafter, leaving behind his wife and two children under the age of five.

School authorities traced the shots to the roof of the Losee Center, about 200 yards from the outdoor event.

Kirk’s death sent shockwaves across the political sphere, with lawmakers on both sides of the aisle condemning the shooting Wednesday afternoon. Calling Kirk “a truly Great American Patriot,” Trump ordered all American flags to be lowered to half-mast until Sunday evening.

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