Tue. Nov 5th, 2024
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French President Emmanuel Macron has signed into law a controversial bill to raise the country’s retirement age by two years, the government’s official journal showed on Saturday, as unions vow to oppose the controversial changes including raising the retirement age from 62 to 64.

France’s constitutional court on Friday approved Macron’s widely unpopular pensions plan, which has sparked months of protests and strikes.

Unions warned they were calling for mass Labour Day protests on May 1, and sometimes violent demonstrations erupted in several cities after the verdict was announced.

The nine-member Constitutional Council ruled in favour of key provisions of the reform, including raising the retirement age to 64 and extending the years of work required for a full pension, saying the legislation was in accordance with French law.

Six minor proposals were rejected, including forcing large companies to publish how many over-55s they employ, and the creation of a special contract for older workers.

By early Saturday, local time, the Official Journal — France’s gazette of record, in which the appearance of legislation means it has been enacted into law — published the text of the pensions reform, amending the word “sixty-two” to “sixty-four” for the country’s age of retirement. 

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The Constitutional Court’s decision could prove a pyrrhic victory for Mr Macron, as analysts say it has come at a major personal cost for the 45-year-old president.

His approval ratings are near their lowest ever, and many voters have been outraged by his decision to ram the pensions law through parliament without a vote.

“It’s scandalous. Where’s the democracy?” asked Bea, a 61-year-old librarian, one of thousands who gathered outside Paris’ city hall. 

“Stay the course. That’s my motto,” Mr Macron said on Friday as he inspected the Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris, four years after a devastating fire nearly destroyed the gothic monument.

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