The French government survived two no-confidence motions on Monday to enable the immediate adoption of President Emmanuel Macron’s unpopular pension reform bill without holding a full vote in parliament.
(Bloomberg) — The French government survived two no-confidence motions on Monday to enable the immediate adoption of President Emmanuel Macron’s unpopular pension reform bill without holding a full vote in parliament.
In a tighter than expected count, the first motion got 278 votes, only nine short of the 287 needed to topple Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne. The second got 94.
“We have gotten to the end of the democratic path of this essential reform for our country,” Borne said on Twitter.
The reform, which includes raising France’s minimum retirement age by two years to 64, is now ready to be signed into law, although it faces continued pushback from opposition lawmakers and further street marches, which have sometimes turned violent. People gathered at a protest in central Paris following Monday’s votes.
A fresh day of nationwide strikes has already been called for Thursday.
The no-confidence motions were filed by opposition parties in an attempt to overturn Macron’s decision last week to use a constitutional provision — known as Article 49.3 — to bypass a vote in the National Assembly.
The government resorted to the provision after it became clear the reform lacked enough votes to pass. If one of the no-confidence votes had been successful, the bill would have been nullified and Borne would have had to resign.
While the outcome brings some relief for Macron and essentially closes the political discussion on the bill, pressure is expected to continue on two fronts.
Opposition parties have made clear their intention to use all means at their disposal to try to derail the reform. Charles de Courson, head of the LIOT group that tabled the first confidence motion, pledged to request a review of the legislation by the constitutional court, which could tweak the bill or scrap it entirely.
Another option being considered is a public referendum, though that would require a complex combination of parliamentary and voter endorsement that would take months.
The hugely unpopular reform is also set to further fuel public anger amid a wave of strikes and demonstrations that have radicalized in recent days. Hundreds have been arrested for vandalizing public property, attacking police officers and setting fire to piles of trash that have been mounting for two weeks in many cities as garbage collectors strike.
Falling Popularity
TotalEnergies SE has cut operating rates at its Normandy and Feyzin refineries after two weeks of blockades at the gates left the company unable to get its fuel to market. The company is no longer operating any of its French refineries normally, raising fears of fuel shortages.
For Macron, whose popularity has sunk to its lowest since the days of the anti-government Yellow Vest protests in early 2019 in a survey by pollster Ifop, the reform is a fundamental part of his strategy to steady France’s deficit-ridden finances and improve the economy’s capacity to grow and create jobs.
Without changes to the retirement system, it alone is set to record an annual deficit of as much as 0.8% of annual economic output during the next 10 years, according to France’s Pensions Advisory Council. Raising the age to 64 and increasing the minimum period of contributions to access a full pension will eliminate the system’s deficit by 2030, according to the government.
Macron’s reform push was made more difficult after he lost an absolute majority in the lower house of parliament last year. His government has tried to secure the support of the conservative Republicans, who have traditionally backed increasing the retirement age, but senior members of the party have publicly blasted the pension overhaul since the protests began in mid-January.
(Adds comment from prime minister in third paragraph.)
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