Bangkok Post

MPs debate controvers­ial pensions bill

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PARIS: The battle over the French government’s pension reforms moved from the street to parliament on Monday, with the opposition vowing to torpedo an overhaul that sparked weeks of strikes and protests.

Leftist unions are up in arms over President Emmanuel Macron’s bid to fuse France’s 42 different retirement schemes into a single points-based system. Public transport workers walked off the job for a month and a half in December and January, causing travel misery for millions, particular­ly in the Paris area.

The government argues that the changes are necessary to make the system fairer for all, but critics say they will force most French people to work longer for smaller payouts.

Labour leaders called for renewed strike action on Monday to coincide with the start of two weeks of parliament­ary debates.

But there were only minor disruption­s to the Paris metro and regional trains were running as normal.

The start of the debate comes as Mr Macron’s centrist party reels from a sex scandal that toppled its candidate for mayor of Paris in next month’s municipal election, Benjamin Griveaux.

Mr Griveaux, a close Macron ally and former government spokesman, pulled out of the running over a leaked video showing a man presented as the 42-year-old politician masturbati­ng.

To replace him, the government chose Health Minister Agnes Buzyn, one of the most prominent defenders of the pension reform, which will now be steered through parliament by her successor Olivier Veran.

With the government refusing to back down on one of Mr Macron’s signature reforms, opposition MPs have stepped into the fray, hoping to derail the bill by tabling a record 41,000 amendments.

Mr Macron’s centrist Republic on the Move (LREM) party aims to get the bill through parliament before next month’s municipal elections.

While the party has a comfortabl­e majority in parliament, some LREM lawmakers have suggested the legislatio­n may have to be forced through by executive decree if the opposition tries to hold it up indefinite­ly. But to do so would see the government accused of curtailing democratic debate.

The reforms would sweep away the separate pension schemes, some dating back hundreds of years, that offer early retirement and other benefits to public-sector workers as well as lawyers, physiother­apists and even Paris Opera employees.

The government argues that the French, who retire earlier than most Europeans, need to work for longer to keep the pension system afloat at a time when people are living longer.

 ?? AP ?? Protesters in Paris hold placards showing a photo montage of late British prime minister Margaret Thatcher and French President Emmanuel Macron on Monday.
AP Protesters in Paris hold placards showing a photo montage of late British prime minister Margaret Thatcher and French President Emmanuel Macron on Monday.

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