French parliament begins debating pension reform bill

PARIS (AA): The French National Assembly on Monday began debating a controversial pension reform bill that has fueled months of ongoing strikes in the capital and throughout France.

A “dead day” had been proposed on Feb. 17 for all forms of transport nationwide, called by unions which are active in multiple strikes since Dec. 5. Only five unions carried through on the call for unrest.

Until the afternoon, little disruption had been seen: most metro, RER rail service, tram, and bus services were running as usual, especially in Paris.

Unions are reserving their efforts for the larger inter-professional day of mobilization on Thursday. The pension reform strikes have cost the SNCF railway €1 billion during December and January.

The bill, initially put forth in parliament on Jan. 24 but in motion by President Emmanuel Macron last September, will be debated for 15 days before going for a vote on March 3. The bill calls for the consolidation of 42 separate pension schemes into one point-based plan, something that protesters claim will force workers to labor longer for a lower payout in the end.

The text of the bill lands in the body containing 65 articles and 29 ordinances along with 41,000 amendments from the opposition.

The hope is to avoid a repeat of the bill’s recent prolonged discussion in Senate: it had endured 10 full days of debate ending Feb. 11 where 22,000 amendments were to be discussed.

The MPs ended up failing to reach a conclusion by the end of the session and only 5,566 amendments were debated.