the Senate adopts the disputed pension reform

Pensions how the left and environmentalists try to exist in

The Senate, with a majority on the right, adopted the pension reform on Saturday March 11 by 195 votes against 112 after ten days of heated debate. This at the end of a new day of mobilization in the streets and before a decisive week for the government project.

Prime Minister Élisabeth Borne did not hide her satisfaction after this first real legislative success for an extremely contested project: “ An important step has been taken “, she immediately congratulated herself in a statement to AFP, convinced that he “ there is a majority to Parliament to adopt the reform.

The Senate announces the result of its vote on the pension reform

Because the flagship project of Emmanuel Macron’s second five-year term has not completed its legislative journey. A crucial vote probably awaits him Thursday in the National Assembly.

It is now up to a joint joint committee of seven deputies and seven senators to meet to try to agree on a common version of the bill. If this is the case, it could be submitted to the final vote of the National Assembly and the Senate next Thursday.

No race started with article 44.3 of the Constitution

The Senate completed its race against the clock on Saturday evening, one day ahead of the deadline set for midnight on Sunday, under the article of the Constitution to which the government has resorted to limit the time of legislative debates.

Finally, here we are! », exclaimed the boss of senators LR Bruno Retailleau who asked Labor Minister Olivier Dussopt to send a message to President Emmanuel Macron. ” We vote for reform, but we don’t vote [pour] him “, he said.

Senate President Gérard Larcher welcomes vote on pension reform

On the left, PS Senator Monique Lubin, castigated a reform “ brutal “. ” It’s a black day for all workers in this country. “, she lamented.

In February, the avalanche of amendments tabled by the left alliance (Nupes) had prevented the Assembly from deciding on this reform, which was contested on all sides, without even managing to examine article 7 at the heart of the project, providing raising the retirement age from 62 to 64.

► To read also: The Council of State had expressed reservations on the pension reform

In the Senate, where insubordinate France (LFI) does not have elected officials, the debates were less peaceful than expected. In order to accelerate the debates which dragged on, Olivier Dussopt, anxious to obtain democratic legitimacy for the reform, had drawn the weapon of Article 44.3 of the Constitution on Friday.

A procedure which allows a single vote on the whole of the text without putting to the vote the amendments to which the government is unfavorable.

Examination of the bill has therefore been able to move forward at a brisk pace, especially after the boost driven by Bruno Retailleau, who on Saturday afternoon gave up presenting his emblematic amendment, which called for the abolition of the special regimes benefiting certain categories of workers, including for current employees.

New day of mobilization in the streets

As the Senate concluded its review of reform, hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets on a seventh day of action, which clearly less mobilized than the previous six.

The Ministry of the Interior counted 368,000 demonstrators in France, including 48,000 in Paris, less than February 16, the day that has mobilized the least since the start of the protest on January 19.

The determination is strong “Nevertheless assured the secretary general of the CFDT, Laurent Berger who regularly underlines the historical character of the popular opposition to this reform. The unions called on the President of the Republic on Saturday to ” consult the people on pension reform.

► To read also: The movement against pension reform is preparing to “bring France to a halt”

The right and the presidential party in control of the joint joint commission?

After the Senate, it is now the turn of the Joint Joint Committee (CMP) to enter the scene, a conclave which will bring together seven deputies, seven senators, and as many substitutes on Wednesday in a closed room at the Palais Bourbon with the objective of reaching a compromise on the measures that the Assembly and the Senate did not vote in the same terms.

The presidential camp and the right seem to have control of this CMP, with respectively five and four holders each, including Olivier Marleix, boss of the LR deputies. A new day of demonstrations, the eighth, is planned in parallel with the meeting.

In the best of scenarios for the executive, if deputies and senators reach an agreement within this commission, the revised text will have to be validated Thursday March 16 from 9 a.m. in the Senate, then at 3 p.m. in the Assembly. This last vote, if it is positive, will be worth definitive adoption by the Parliament.

A much more divided right in the Assembly

But doubts about the existence of a majority in the Assembly have revived the hypothesis of a recourse by the government to article 49.3 of the Constitution. It allows adoption without a vote, but exposes the executive to the risk of a motion of censure.

At the Palais Bourbon, the right, traditionally in favor of postponing the legal retirement age, is much more divided than in the Senate. At this stage, only between 30 and 35 LR deputies (out of 61) plan to vote for the text, around fifteen to oppose it, and around ten to abstain, according to an internal source.

(with agencies)

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