With MoDem caught up in a judicial investigation into claims it misused European Union parliamentary funds, the party's leader Francois Bayrou - a significant ally since backing Macron's presidential bid in February - quit as Justice Minister on Wednesday.
France's president Emmanuel Macron appears to have ditched his centrist allies after two more high-profile government ministers resigned after a month in office.
While Bayrou and de Sarnez have not commented yet, Goulard on Tuesday said she was leaving because of the investigation, into whether MoDem used European Union parliament funds to finance jobs carried out by party officials in France.
A fourth minister shadowed by conflict-of-interest allegations left his cabinet post for a parliamentary job.
Bayrou last week was reprimanded by Prime Minister Edouard Philippe for having called reporters at a radio station asking them to not report on the probe into MoDem's EU Parliament assistants.
Ferrand, a close ally of Macron's who helped manage the now-President's election campaign, has been caught up in allegations that he and his domestic partner benefited improperly from property deals done six years ago by a health insurance fund he managed in the Brittany region.
The minister who was leading Macron's crusade to purify politics was forced to quit Wednesday over corruption allegations.
Defense minister Sylvie Goulard, the most prominent woman in the Cabinet Macron named a little more than a month ago, suggested in a statement she chose to quit the government to avoid hurting Macron's efforts to clean up corruption.
Mattis vents U.S. frustration over North Korea
The issue is a sticking point between Washington and Beijing that experts say needs to be the focus of frank discussion. In a statement the company said, "The assessment of risk for Americans visiting North Korea has become too high".
Bayrou was a key backer of Macron's movement during the presidential campaign, and his support was crucial in winning centrist votes for the new president.
French President Emmanuel Macron put a group of relative unknowns, some from outside politics, into ministerial roles on Wednesday to replace those that left under a cloud just weeks into his tenure.
The centre-right party's two other ministers have also quit Macron's administration since Tuesday.
A spokesman for Macron's government, Christophe Castaner, said their resignations "simplified the situation". French media have reported that the emergency removal of certain civil liberties may be made permanent.
The investigation was triggered by complaints from a former Modem staffer and a lawmaker for the far-right National Front, as well as press reports.
"In the event that the preliminary probe on MoDem leads to a verification of the employment conditions of my assistants at the European Parliament, I want to be free to demonstrate my good faith", she said in a statement.
Paris prosecutors opened a preliminary investigation this month after the claims first emerged in the Canard Enchaine investigative newspaper.
Macron is set to introduce an ethics law after the presidential candidate of the conservative Republicans, Francois Fillon, was charged with allegedly paying his wife Penelope and their children around 900,000 euros ($1 billion) to work for him in parliament.



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