French National Assembly deputies voting on suspending pension reform in a tense session.
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Deputies to vote on suspending pension reform

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On Wednesday, November 12, 2025, the French National Assembly will consider a government amendment to suspend the 2023 pension reform, which raises the legal retirement age to 64, until the 2027 presidential election. This measure, included in the 2026 Social Security financing bill, marks a concession to the left to secure the budget. However, La France Insoumise opposes the suspension, demanding full repeal.

The pension reform, passed in 2023 under Élisabeth Borne using Article 49.3 despite widespread protests, provided for a gradual increase in the legal retirement age from 62 to 64. On Wednesday, November 12, the National Assembly will vote on the government's amendment (Article 45 bis) to suspend it until the 2027 presidential election, as part of the review of the "expenses" section of the 2026 Social Security financing bill (PLFSS).

Sébastien Lecornu's government deposited this amendment in fulfillment of a commitment to the Socialist Party (PS), which sees it as a victory following intense negotiations. The PS anticipates a favorable vote to claim it forced the executive's hand on this flagship issue. Recently, the Prime Minister expanded the suspension to long careers, as demanded by the left, by submitting a rectifying letter to the Conseil d'État.

However, La France Insoumise (LFI) deputies will vote against it, denouncing a "scam" and rejecting any compromise with the centrist bloc. Loyal to the 2024 Nouveau Front Populaire program, they demand full repeal to avoid any "deal-making" with Macronists. Jean-Luc Mélenchon had insisted on implementing the full program.

Pierre Moscovici, first president of the Cour des comptes, warns of the financial repercussions. The suspension will cost 1.4 billion euros in 2026, worsening a structural deficit already at 6.6 billion. Without the reform, which was to yield 10 billion, the deficit would reach 15 billion in 2035 and 32 billion in 2045. He urges reopening the debate in 2027 to safeguard the pay-as-you-go system.

This symbolic vote, with no immediate legal effect, signals the reform's future, initially reopened by François Bayrou in December 2024. It fits a tight timeline: the Assembly must adopt the PLFSS by December 12 for promulgation by December 31, avoiding the 2024 budget crisis without resorting to 49.3.

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Reactions on X to the proposed suspension of the 2023 French pension reform are divided. Socialists express satisfaction with the government's amendment extending it to long careers, seeing it as a concession. La France Insoumise and some users criticize it as a mere delay rather than true suspension, demanding full repeal. Right-wing figures like RN support the vote but call it a politicized maneuver. Critics warn of financial burdens on future generations and increased taxes.

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French National Assembly deputies voting on pension reform suspension during budget debates, with a tense and divided atmosphere in the chamber.
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Assembly suspends pension reform during budget debates

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The National Assembly adopted a government amendment on November 12 suspending the 2023 pension reform until 2027, with 255 votes in favor and 146 against. This measure, demanded by socialists to avoid censure, divided the left, as Insoumis voted against in favor of full repeal. Debates on the Social Security budget ended at midnight on November 13 without a vote, sending the text to the Senate.

Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu announced on Tuesday the suspension of the 2023 pension reform until the 2027 presidential election, in exchange for the Socialist Party's commitment not to vote censure. This concession aims to stabilize the government amid political instability. The measure pauses the raising of the legal retirement age to 64 and the acceleration of the contribution period.

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The French government has formalized the suspension of the pension reform until January 2028 through a rectificative letter to the social security budget, presented on October 23, 2025. This measure, costing 100 million euros in 2026 and 1.4 billion in 2027, will be funded by under-indexing pensions and increasing contributions from health insurers. Unions and opposition parties denounce an unfair burden on current retirees.

French deputies resumed debates on the 2026 social security financing bill on December 2 in a tense atmosphere marked by divisions within the government coalition. The text, amended by the Senate which removed the suspension of pension reform, risks rejection without compromise with the left. A solemn vote is scheduled for December 9, with crucial stakes for the deficit and government stability.

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Despite Emmanuel Macron's denials of a suspension, the CFDT's general secretary insists the 2023 pension reform is indeed suspended. Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu plans to include it in the social security budget via a rectifying letter. A conference on work and pensions will open in late November to discuss alternative systems.

The National Assembly is set to vote Tuesday on the social security financing bill (PLFSS) in second reading, a decisive ballot for Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu. If adopted, it could be definitively passed before the holidays; if rejected, a new debate is likely early in 2026. Party positions remain uncertain, with government concessions to ecologists and socialists.

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Debates on the 2026 finance bill at the National Assembly drag on without addressing high patrimony taxation, as the pension reform suspension begins scrutiny in committee. Socialists, led by Olivier Faure, threaten a censure motion if no fiscal justice concessions are made. The right firmly opposes the pension suspension, vowing to restore it.

 

 

 

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