The French Senate approved the controversial pension reform that raises the minimum age for retirement from work

by time news

In order for it to enter into force, it needs the consensus of the Chamber of Deputies. There are massive protests and rejection by society.

He senate of france approved this Wednesday the article of the questioned government project of retirement pension reform which raises the minimum age from 62 to 64 years for retirement from work.

The controversial initiative had the approval of the Upper House with 201 votes in favor and 115 against. However, for it to enter into force, it must also have the consensus of the deputies, who have a legal term to debate until March 26.

The project promoted by the government of the president Emmanuel Macron Seeks that the retirement age be raised progressively, at a rate of three months per yearas of September 1, 2023. Thus, the 64-year-old requirement would only be reached in 2030.

In parallel, the initiative proposes that in order to obtain a full retirement credit, without discounts, the required contribution period increases from 42 to 43 years, at the rate of one quarter per year until 2027.

The reform is highly resisted in society. According to various surveys, two out of three French people expressed their rejection. In addition, the main union organizations have carried out six days of general strike and massive street protests.

Society’s rejection of the pension reform in France

Since the pension reform was presented in January, the unions organized large mobilizations, including the largest in three decades: this Tuesday, barely a day before the Senate approved the initiative, 3.5 million people demonstrated in the More than 200 rallies called throughout the country, according to the CGT union, while the Ministry of the Interior estimated 1.28 million. However, they failed to get the government to back down.



The protest was strong in Rennes, in northwestern France. AFP photo

“Has been a historic daydue to the extent of the strikes and the mobilization”, the main unions affirmed in a joint statement in which they insisted that “the Government must withdraw its project”.

The unions called a new massive demonstration for next Saturdayand warned that the lack of response from the Executive “inevitably leads to a situation that could become explosive.”

This Tuesday, 80 percent of the high-speed trains (TGV) on average and practically all other long-distance conventional trains.

On international lines, there was no service on the Paris-Barcelona corridor or on the lines between France and Germany; only one return train on the links with Italy, and 20 percent of the usual ones on the connections with Switzerland.

Meanwhile, the strike also included the suppression of 20 percent of the flights at Charles de Gaulle and 30 percent at the other airport in Paris, as well as those in Beauvais, Bordeaux, Lille, Lyon, Nantes, Marseille, Montpellier, Nice and Toulouse.

With information from Telam.

ES​

look also

You may also like

Leave a Comment