French PM survives no-confidence vote

France's Prime Minister Francois Bayrou, center, speaks at the National Assembly, France's lower house parliament, in Paris, Feb. 5, 2025.

France's prime minister survived a no-confidence vote by parliament on Wednesday after he invoked special constitutional powers to force through the country's 2025 budget.

Only 128 lawmakers voted in favor of the no-confidence motion against Francois Bayrou, falling short of the 289 votes required to pass.

Far-left lawmakers called for the measure after Bayrou invoked Article 49.3, which grants the minority government special constitutional powers to pass legislation without a parliamentary vote.

The no-confidence motion appeared to have no chance of succeeding after the Socialists and the far-right National Rally lawmakers announced they would not support it.

Under France's Constitution, the no-confidence motion's failure meant that the 2025 budget automatically became law.

The French political scene has been challenging since President Emmanuel Macron called snap elections last year, a move that resulted in no party having a majority in parliament.

Some information for this story came from Reuters and The Associated Press.