LIVE. Vote of Confidence: For François Bayrou, One Last Speech Before the Fall?

As for the future, after Bayrou, Jean-Philippe Tanguy assures that they will not automatically censor the new Prime Minister.
"I'm not going to tell you that we're going to censor everything and anyone like the Mélenchonists who are just posturing," he says.
Guest on RMC-BFMTV, Jaen-Philippe Tanguy, RN MP for the Somme, regrets the "time lost" by the current situation.
"I think that every day that passes is a day lost for France as long as there is no political way to break away," he said, justifying his desire to "bring down" Bayrou. "It is undoubtedly, sometimes, the best solution to break away," he justified.
"He provoked it himself (this vote of confidence): he chose to provoke this crisis"
Who's next for Bayrou? This is the question on everyone's lips this Monday, just hours before the confidence vote. A vote that should signal the end of the Pau mayor's term at Matignon.
While Olivier Faure sees himself taking his place in the Socialist Party, it's out of the question for the current Interior Minister, Bruno Retailleau. For their part, Marine Le Pen and Jordan Bardella continue to call for a dissolution and a return to voting.
>> Our full article - Vote of confidence: who will be in charge of the post-Bayrou Matignon era?
François Bayrou on Sunday criticized the attitude of political forces, "at civil war with each other," but who will join forces to "bring down the government."
This Monday at 3 p.m., the Prime Minister will take the podium of the National Assembly to ask for the confidence of the deputies. Around 7 p.m., their verdict will be announced.
Barring any major surprises, the verdict is already known: faced with the announced vetoes from the left and the far right, the tenant of Matignon knows that the end of his lease is imminent.
Among the Republicans, their leader, Laurent Wauquiez, has given his group "freedom to vote." This contradicts the call by party leader Bruno Retailleau, Minister of the Interior, to support the Bayrou government. "There is no question" of the right accepting the nomination of a Socialist Party Prime Minister, Mr. Retailleau warned.
Welcome to our live broadcast.
Barring a dramatic turn of events, François Bayrou will become the first head of government of the Fifth Republic to face a vote of confidence. A scenario he himself provoked and which opens a new period of great uncertainty, at least until the appointment of his successor.
RMC