Leaders | A crisis in Paris

France steps into deep trouble

It has no government and no budget, and is politically gridlocked

A Paris Metro sign illuminating the word 'Merde!'
image: Lisa Sheehan/Alamy

ON DECEMBER 7th, 50 heads of state and government will take their places to celebrate the reopening of Notre Dame, Paris’s 12th-century Gothic cathedral, gutted by fire five years ago but now restored with astonishing speed and loving skill. Donald Trump will be there (Joe Biden, only the second Catholic president of America, sadly will not) to witness France at its best. It has pulled off, on time and to budget, a feat of craftsmanship and renewal that surely no other country could have managed.

Explore more

This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline “Into the unknown”

From the December 7th 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

Brazil’s Supreme Court is on trial

How a superstar judge illuminates an excessive concentration of power

A man employed in a plastic recycling plant breaks down plastic barrels

Don’t overlook the many benefits of plastics

If they are a problem, it is because they are badly managed


Garbage collectors on strike outside a waste management depot in Birmingham

The lesson of Birmingham’s striking binmen

The moment is ripe to reform Britain’s equal-pay rules


How a dollar crisis would unfold

If investors keep selling American assets, a grim fate awaits the world economy

Zuckerberg on trial: why Meta deserves to win

Social media has plenty of problems. Lack of competition isn’t one of them