In this third episode of our series, Laureline Dupont, deputy director of L’Express, and Eric Mandonnet, editor-in-chief of the Politics department, are interested in the mark that the pension reform will leave at the start of the second five-year term.
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The team: Charlotte Baris (presentation and writing), Jules Krot (editing and direction)
Credits: Public Senate, AFP, TF1, LCP, TV5 Monde, RTL, INA, Euronews, France Info, Elysée, Radio J, BFMTV
Music and dressing: Emmanuel Herschon/Studio Torrent
Logo: Jérémy Cambour
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Charlotte Baris: When Emmanuel Macron speaks from the Elysée on April 17, 2023, he tries to turn the page and respond to the anger that has been expressed since the passage of 49.3 of the pension reform.
After months of procrastination and accelerated debates, the different political forces have not reached an agreement on the postponement of the departure age. The government of Elisabeth Borne therefore took responsibility, then promulgated the text. And the tension does not go down. Every time the president travels, he is now greeted with a chorus of pots and pans.
Even during his 100 days speech, some would rather make noise than listen to him. They therefore do not hear that Emmanuel Macron is planning an assessment on July 14, particularly around three major projects: work, justice and republican order… But the months that await him will be far from bringing this appeasement as hoped.
To go further
Pension reform, possible compromise from the Macronist camp?
Emmanuel Macron: his fantasy of life without Prime Minister
Doubts, pressures and a lot of vagueness: this “neither-nor” which embarrasses Macronie