French President Emmanuel Macron signed his controversial pension reform into law Saturday, April 15, defying three months of protests and pleas from unions not to implement the legislation. The text was published before dawn in France's Journal officiel, meaning it has now been enacted into law.
The publication came just hours after the approval on Friday by the Constitutional Council of the essence of the legislation, including the headline change of raising the retirement age from 62 to 64.
Unions warned they were calling for mass Labour Day protests on May 1, and sometimes violent demonstrations erupted in several cities overnight after the verdict was announced.
The battle to implement the law turned into the biggest domestic challenge of Macron's second mandate, as he faced widespread popular opposition to the changes but also sliding personal popularity.
Socialist leader Olivier Faure said that Macron's swift signing of the law showed "disdain" towards the protest movement while hard-left MP Francois Ruffin called it a "democratic hold-up". "A law enacted in the middle of the night, like thieves," tweeted French Communist Party chief Fabien Roussel. "Everyone on the street May 1."
Six minor proposals rejected
The nine-member Constitutional Council ruled in favor 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.
"The Social Security Code is thus amended. In the first paragraph, the word: 'sixty-two; is replaced by the word: 'sixty-four'," states the text, referring to the retirement age.
Macron has called the change "necessary" to avoid annual pension deficits forecast to hit €13.5 billion by 2030, according to government figures. "Stay the course. That's my motto," Macron said Friday as he inspected Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris, four years after a devastating fire nearly destroyed the gothic monument. Seeking to avoid triumphalism, Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne tweeted that after the court verdict "there are no winners or losers".
But left-wing daily Liberation said in its headline above a picture of a protest: "Not defeated: Opponents of the reform are not going to disarm".
Bikes, e-scooters and garbage were set on fire in the capital overnight while protests rallying hundreds erupted in other cities, including Marseille and Toulouse.
In the western city of Rennes, protesters set fire to the entrance of a police station and a conference center. Paris police said 112 people had been arrested as of 10:30 pm.
Macron, who has made only the most infrequent public comments on the crisis, is expected to address the French early next week. It remains to be seen if the months-long effort by trade unions to block the changes will continue after three months of strikes and protests.
In a second decision on Friday, the court rejected a bid from opposition lawmakers to force a referendum on an alternative pension law that would have kept the retirement age at 62.