PARIS – French President Emmanuel Macron has decided to force through his controversial pension reform without calling a vote in parliament, using a constitutional power enabling the government to bypass lawmakers. In a statement to the Assemblée Nationale on Thursday, March 16, Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne announced the government was triggering Article 49.3 of the French Constitution as millions of workers continue to protest across France against the reform.
The Council of Ministers held an emergency meeting minutes ahead of a scheduled vote at the Assemblée to allow the prime minister to trigger the procedure. The decision came after a frantic series of meetings with senior figures, including Prime Minister Borne, that appeared to reveal there was no majority in the Assemblée to adopt the reform.
The reform had been comfortably passed by the Sénat, the upper chamber of Parliament, on Thursday morning. But reports indicated that the ruling party, which lost its overall majority in elections last year, was a handful of votes short of a majority for passing the legislation in the Assemblée.
The decision to bypass a parliamentary vote means that the government can ram through the legislation to raise the retirement age from 62 to 64 without the risk of losing a parliamentary vote. But it also carries the risk of further inflaming the protests and strikes that have rocked France over the last months and gives the opposition the right to immediately call a confidence vote in parliament.
Several opposition groups are likely to file motions of no-confidence. Marine Le Pen’s far-right Rassemblement National announced it would do. “It’s a total failure for the government,” Le Pen told reporters afterward, adding that Borne should resign. “From the beginning the government fooled itself into thinking it had a majority,” she said.
The opposition reacted with fury to the decision to avoid a vote after weeks of debates on the legislation. “When a president has no majority in the country, no majority in the National Assembly, he must withdraw his bill,” said Socialist Party chief Olivier Faure.