Pension reform has been imposed in France without a vote. How did it happen?

Several opposition parties say they plan to file a motion of no-confidence in the government, after the French government triggered a clause in the country's constitution to introduce the pension reform.

Protesters outside France's parliament.

Thousands of protesters demonstrate on Place de la Concorde square near the French Parliament after pension reforms were introduced without a parliamentary vote. Source: AAP / Yoan Valat

Key Points
  • The pension rule changes will raise the retirement age in France from 62 to 64.
  • Protests have continued for weeks over the plan.
  • The strike action has disrupted trains and flights, with piles of uncollected garbage growing in Paris.
According to polls, two thirds of French people oppose the pension reform, which raises the retirement age by two years to 64.

The constitutional power used by the French government on Thursday to ram through parliament the deeply controversial reform, which critics say is undemocratic.

Article 49.3 of the constitution, widely referred to as "the 49.3" in France, allows a prime minister to push draft legislation through the National Assembly without a vote by politicians.

A bill is then considered adopted, although opposition MPs are able to call a vote of no-confidence in the government within the following 24 hours which could reverse the move if passed.
"In the eyes of French people, the 49.3 is associated with brutality," Antoine Bristielle, a public opinion expert at the Fondation Jean-Jaures, a Paris think-tank, told AFP.

President Emmanuel Macron's government chose to deploy the article on Thursday to pass the pensions overhaul after two months of heated debate in parliament, as well as strikes and mass protests in the streets.

The upper-chamber Senate, which is dominated by conservatives, approved the bill on Thursday morning.

"When you don't have a majority or at least no guaranteed majority in the National Assembly, you invoke the 49.3," explained constitutional expert Dominique Rousseau.

You do this "either to bring it to heel... or because you are not certain you will secure enough votes," Mr Rousseau said.
Protesters gather at Place d'Italie square in Paris to demonstrate against the pension reform on 31 January 2023.
Protesters gather at Place d'Italie square in Paris to demonstrate against the pension reform on 31 January 2023. Source: Getty / Alain Jocard
Thursday saw the article used for the 100th time under France's modern constitution, which created an all-powerful president in 1958, overturning the previous one and its parliamentary system.

Under the modern fifth republic, 16 prime ministers have used the article and have managed to stay in power.

Macron's government is expected to survive a no-confidence vote after the head of the opposition Republicans party said it would vote with the president's allies, which are 39 seats short of a majority in the 577-seat assembly.

Michel Rocard, who was prime minister from 1988 to 1991, holds the record for using the 49.3, having deployed it 28 times.

Élisabeth Borne holds second place in the ranking, despite only becoming head of government following Macron's re-election for a second term in May last year.

She has invoked it 11 times.
MPs discuss the pension reform on 16 March 2023.
Prime Minister Élisabeth Borne used a special constitutional power to force through the pension changes in the lower-house National Assembly without giving MPs a chance to vote. Source: AAP / Blondet Eliot
In just two months late last year, she used it 10 times, including to push through the 2023 state and social security budgets.

In recent decades, the measure has proven useful for even those presidents who initially disapproved of it.

When Francois Hollande was still a member of parliament, he criticised then prime minister Dominique de Villepin for using the article, calling it "anti-democratic".

But a decade later, when he was president, his head of government Manuel Valls rolled out the 49.3 six times.

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3 min read
Published 17 March 2023 6:51am
Updated 17 March 2023 8:01am
Source: AFP


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