2023 French pension reform law

In 2023, a law was passed in France that raises the retirement age from 62 to 64 with a requirement that the retiree has worked at least 43 years. Its provisions, which sparked strikes, were highly controversial, as was Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne's invocation of Article 49.3 of the French Constitution, allowing a draft law to pass without a vote unless the Assembly adopts a motion of no confidence within a set time. Two such motions were filed within the required timeframe, and both of them were voted down on 20 March.

2023 pension reform law
French Parliament
  • 2023 Social Security Financing Adjustment Law (French: Loi de financement rectificative de la sécurité sociale pour 2023)
CitationLaw no. 2023-270 (LOI n° 2023-270)
Enacted bySenate
Enacted byNational Assembly
Signed byPresident Emmanuel Macron
Signed14 April 2023
Legislative history
First chamber: Senate
Introduced byBorne government
Passed16 March 2023
Voting summary
  • 193 voted for
  • 114 voted against
Second chamber: National Assembly
Member in chargeBorne government
Passed20 March 2023
Voting summary
  • 295, by not voting for a
    motion of censure
    which would
    have prevented the bill
    from passing, effectively voted for
  • 278, by voting for said
    motion of censure,
    effectively voted against
Summary
Raises the retirement age
Status: Current legislation

History

On 30 January the bill was introduced to the National Assembly.

In February the Assembly debated the measure. On 14 February, Article 2 of the draft law was rejected by the Assembly by a vote of 203 to 256.

On 17 February Borne invoked Article 47-1 of the Constitution. Said Article states that if the National Assembly has not considered all provisions of a social security financing bill within 20 days of its being introduced, said bill may be transmitted to and considered by the Senate notwithstanding the fact the draft law has not been yet approved by the Assembly in its entirety; it furthermore dictates that after the Senate passes the bill, the latter must be considered by a Joint Committee, which can amend it. The text adopted by the committee is then put up to a vote in both houses of Parliament, which at that point can only vote in favor or against the whole bill, without being able to further amend it.

Article 47-1 was employed to circumvent the effort of opposition Deputies, which had introduced thousands of amendments to try to obstruct it.

On 11 March, the Senate passed the bill in a 195–112 vote, with the Senate Republicans and the Rally of Democrats, Progressive and Independent group voting in favour.[1]

On 15 March, a Joint Committee considered the bill, ultimately approving it with some amendments in a 10–4 vote.

On 16 March, the Senate voted 193–114 to accept the amendments proposed by the committee. Later the same day the Government, fearing the proposed law would not have enough support to pass in the National Assembly, invoked Article 49-3 of the Constitution, engaging its responsibility on the bill. This special procedure allows the bill to automatically pass without a vote unless a motion of no confidence in the government is tabled within 24 hours, in which case the bill is only adopted after said motion is defeated.[2][3][4][5] Two such motions were consequently filed by opposition groups within the required timeframe. Both of them were voted down on 20 March, allowing the bill to pass.

On 14 April, the Constitutional Council issued a ruling on a legal challenge to the bill filed by opposition MPs,[6] finding the draft law to be constitutional and rejecting an initial request for a referendum. Later the same day, Macron signed the bill into law.[7]

The Constitutional Council rejected a second referendum request on 3 May.[8]

See also

International:

References

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