French Premier Buys Time to Pass Budget With Concessions
French Premier Buys Time to Pass Budget With Concessions · Bloomberg

(Bloomberg) -- French Prime Minister Francois Bayrou appears to have bought himself at least a few months in power by offering to renegotiate a contested 2023 pension law, securing the tacit backing of enough lawmakers to adopt an urgently needed budget.

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The premier said labor and business unions will be tasked with negotiating changes that could include halting the planned increase in the minimum retirement age to 64 from 62.

Any potential modifications must not worsen the financial balance of the vast public system, Bayrou added, noting that the current plan will remain in place should three months of talks fail.

Bayrou’s olive branch on pension reform appeased some Socialists who said they would be open to negotiations with labor unions, effectively granting his government the time needed to pass the budget.

“We trust in social dialogue, and no one should be ashamed to go back to meeting our social partners,” said Socialist lawmaker Boris Vallaud after the speech.

The concessions offered by Bayrou confirm his effort to strike a deal with moderates in the leftist New Popular Front alliance in the National Assembly that would ensure their abstention in no-confidence votes. Similar attempts by Michel Barnier to reach an understanding with Marine Le Pen’s far right backfired.

“The first emergency is to respond to the question of pensions that is dominating public debate,” Bayrou said in a policy speech at the National Assembly. “We can look for a path for new reform, with no totems and no taboos.”

Lawmakers from the hard-left France Unbowed proposed a no-confidence motion after the prime minister spoke at the National Assembly.

That censure vote, which will be held Thursday, has little chance of passing as National Rally vice-president Sebastien Chenu said far-right lawmakers would not back the left on this occasion. But there will likely be more of the ballots in coming weeks and months, making it crucial for Bayrou to keep the Socialists in his corner.

Socialist leader Olivier Faure said late Tuesday that his party still needed guarantees on what would happen at the end of the three-month negotiating period and that it couldn’t accept an automatic return to the current law.

Sophie Binet, the head of the leftist CGT union said on RTL radio on Wednesday that Bayrou’s stance on maintaining the current pension law if there isn’t an agreement via negotiations “has put employers in a powerful position” since they don’t want changes. “The prime minister has to clarify this situation,” she said, adding that the CGT hasn’t yet decided whether to participate in the discussions.