Toronto Star

French legislator­s clocking in long hours under Macron,

French legislator­s slam 80-hour work weeks as ‘totally unreasonab­le’

- GREGORY VISCUSI

In the land of the 35-hour work week, French President Emmanuel Macron’s frenetic efforts to “transform” France has left members of parliament exhausted, with many clocking in more than twice those hours.

“We have had sessions this past month that lasted 80 hours a week, we were in session 17 consecutiv­e days,” National Assembly President François de Rugy said Tuesday on Europe 1 radio. “After a while, it’s no longer possible. This is not how a normal assembly works. It doesn’t allow us to produce good laws.”

De Rugy is meeting with party whips to find ways to speed up parliament­ary work and stop holding debates on weekends, when many parliament­arians say they should be back in their constituen­cies meeting voters.

“All of this is totally unreasonab­le,” Jean-Luc Melenchon, the leader of the far-left party France Unbowed said on May 31 in parliament. “We are exasperate­d and for some of us, exhausted. This isn’t the normal life of a parliament­arian, staying night and day.”

The government is unapologet­ic.

“It’s good news that members of parliament are working hard,” government spokespers­on Benjamin Griveaux told reporters Wednesday. “It means they are hard at work on the transforma­tion of the country.

“We ask a lot, and we are aware of that.”

Griveaux also said the government is working on an overhaul of France’s legislatur­e to cut the number of deputies, add an element of proportion­al representa­tion and speed up debate by limiting how many amendments can be presented.

In the past month, parliament has had to consider bills on asylum and immigratio­n, railways, agricultur­al practices, housing, and profession­al training.

Lawmakers’ staff say they’re fed up. In a statement late May, the French associatio­n of parliament­ary assistants said that working on weekends shouldn’t become the norm. Macron’s aides also privately grumble about workdays that run well into the evenings.

“At least no one is calling us lazy,” Richard Ferrand, chief whip for Macron’s LREM party, which holds a majority in the lower house, told reporters Wednesday.

Newspaper Le Figaro cast doubt on how much more the National Assembly is working. Using statistics collected by two websites that track parliament­ary work, the newspaper calculated that the number of sessions is actually only up 4 per cent from the first year of president François Hollande’s presidency, though it’s a 61-per-cent increase from Nicolas Sarkozy’s first year.

Christian Jacob, an opposition member of parliament from Sarkozy’s the Republican­s party, told Le Figaro that he blamed the erratic nature of Macron’s agenda.

“From January to March, we weren’t doing all that much, and we often finished the week Wednesday,” he said. “The government controls our agenda.”

What’s also new now is that 75 per cent of the National Assembly elected last June hadn’t served in the previous legislatur­e, compared with 40 per cent in the 2012 elections.

LREM was created in the slipstream of Macron’s successful presidenti­al run, and used a selection process to whittle down 14,000 candidates to 428 candidates, of which half came from civil society and had no political background. It holds 311 of the 577 seats in the National Assembly. While France also has an upper Senate, its powers are limited.

For the record, members of parliament, such as managers and liberal profession­als, aren’t limited to 35-hour weeks. They earn about 5,400 euros ($8,230 Canadian) a month after social charges.

“We have had sessions this past month that lasted 80 hours a week, we were in session 17 consecutiv­e days.” FRANÇOIS DE RUGY NATIONAL ASSEMBLY PRESIDENT

 ?? LUDOVIC MARIN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? “It’s good news that members of parliament are working hard,” said a spokespers­on for President Emmanuel Macron. “It means they are hard at work on the transforma­tion of the country.”
LUDOVIC MARIN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES “It’s good news that members of parliament are working hard,” said a spokespers­on for President Emmanuel Macron. “It means they are hard at work on the transforma­tion of the country.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada