Pensions: Macron will summon Borne and majority executives this Monday

Emmanuel Macron will receive the heavyweights of the majority this Monday noon

Pensions: Macron will summon Borne and majority executives this Monday

Emmanuel Macron will receive the heavyweights of the majority this Monday noon. Elisabeth Borne and the main executives of her majority will go to the Élysée for a meeting on the eve of the tenth day of mobilization against the pension reform, the Élysée announced on Sunday, confirming information from BFMTV.

The president will meet at noon with his Prime Minister, before being joined at 1:15 p.m. by the bosses of parliamentary groups, party leaders and some members of the government. The Head of State had notably instructed the Prime Minister to "expand" the majority and to work on the rearrangement of the parliamentary agenda in the coming weeks.

The day before, therefore Monday, Emmanuel Macron will receive the Prime Minister, Élisabeth Borne, and the executives of her majority – party leaders, ministers, parliamentarians – at the Élysée, with the deleterious social climate in the background.

While the clashes have moved, over the weekend, around the basins of Sainte-Soline (Deux-Sèvres), damage to street furniture and the throwing of projectiles at the police have been reported this Saturday in Rennes during the anti-reform procession.

The culmination of a week of daily scuffles, since the government's recourse to 49.3 to have its reform adopted in Parliament, this ninth day at the initiative of the unions also marked a rebound in the mobilization, with between 1, 09 million (Beauvau) and 3.5 million (CGT) participants.

Success overshadowed by accusations of violence, which also target the police: thumb ripped off for a protester in Rouen, railway worker "blind" in Paris according to SUD-Rail, unions "targeted by the water cannon" in Rennes...

The Council of Europe was alarmed by an "excessive use of force" and criticism focusing on the Brav-M, a motorcycle unit responsible for maintaining order in the capital and whose disbandment has not yet taken place. is "not on the agenda", according to police chief Laurent Nuñez.

Consult our file: Pensions: the big bang