The French government survived by a narrow margin a no-confidence vote on Monday after Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne forced controversial pension reforms through parliament without a vote last week.
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The motion, tabled by a centrist party and others, was slightly short of the 287 it needed to pass, gathering 278 votes.
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A second planned motion of no confidence, put forth by the far-right National Rally (RN), had no chance of going through on Monday as other opposition parties said they wouldn't support it.
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The pension reforms, spearheaded by President Emmanuel Macron, would increase the retirement age from 62 to 64. This has led to ongoing protests in Paris and other cities since Thursday.
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Centrist lawmaker Charles de Courson opened the debate, which dragged on into Monday afternoon.
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"You failed to convince, so you chose the easy way out," de Courson, whose coalition supports the no-confidence vote, told the government. "You clearly distorted the spirit of the constitution."
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Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne defended her controversial move during the debate, saying it was a compromise. She described her use of the article to bypass a vote on the reforms as "profoundly democratic" under the French constitution.
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"We never went so far in building a compromise as we did with this reform," Borne was quoted as saying.
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One of the no-confidence motions was filed by the small, centrist Liot bloc and supported by the left-wing Nupes coalition. The other was filed by the far-right National Rally of Marine Le Pen.
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If a no-confidence vote is successful, the pension reform bill would be rejected and Macron would also have to appoint a new cabinet.
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Macron's tenuous political alliance has the largest number of MPs in the National Assembly but it does not control an absolute majority.
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However, the government believes it can survive both votes, especially since the conservative Republicans vowed not to support either of the no-confidence motions.
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"Let's get clarity. The vote means clarity," Aurore Berge, chief of the pro-government MPs, told broadcaster Franceinfo Sunday.
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"It's about one sole question: is the pension reform indispensable or unbearable for the French public?"
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The election reforms triggered numerous protests and strikes in the months leading up to last Thursday.
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Protests erupted in major cities again after Borne used Article 49/3 of the French constitution to force the bill through parliament without a vote, a strategy the Macron government has repeatedly had to turn to since losing an absolute majority in parliament last year.
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Garbage collectors, oil refinery staff and other workers have continued to go on strike. A nationwide day of action has been planned for the coming Thursday.
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"For as long as the 64-year reform is on the table, we have to keep it up," far-left former presidential candidate Jean-Luc Melenchon told broadcaster RTL on Sunday.
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However, he urged protesters to remain non-violent.
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"Don't make our struggle invisible with practices that would be turned against us," Melenchon said. "Mr Macron... is counting on people going too far, so as to profit from a situation of fear."
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zc/es (AFP, Reuters, dpa, AP)
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