Macron’s pension law passes constitutional test, will enter into force in September

PARIS,  (Reuters) – French President Emmanuel Macron’s flagship pension reform, which triggered weeks of nationwide protests, received the Constitutional Council’s green light yesteeday and can now be signed into law and enter into force swiftly.

The legislation, which pushes up the age at which one can draw a full pension to 64 from 62, has led to huge and sometimes violent protests in recent weeks.

But in what will be a huge relief to Macron and his government, the Constitutional Council gave it the green light with just some minor caveats.

Labour Minister Olivier Dussopt said the law would enter into force on Sept.1 as initially planned, brushing off requests by unions not to promulgate it in the face of huge public opposition.

Opinion polls show a vast majority oppose the reform, as well as the fact that the government invoked Article 49.3 of the constitution allowing it to pass the bill without a final vote in parliament that it might have lost.

Protesters gathered outside Paris City Hall, holding banners reading “climate of anger” and “no end to the strikes until the reform is pulled” when the Council’s verdict was announced.

“We just hope we’ll see a response like the one that followed the 49.3, that the deep anger of the people, workers and students, resurfaces, and that people get back out on the streets,” said unionised train diver Farid Boukhenfer at the Paris rally.