Europe 1 with AFP 10:26 p.m., May 30, 2022

The bill on purchasing power will be presented to the Council of Ministers "June 29" then submitted to parliament "in the process", said government spokeswoman Olivia Grégoire in an interview with Le Parisien broadcast on Monday.

The purchasing power "will be the subject of a communication in the Council of Ministers before the legislative elections", she assured.

The bill on purchasing power will be presented to the Council of Ministers "June 29" then submitted to parliament "in the process", said government spokeswoman Olivia Grégoire in an interview with Le Parisien broadcast on Monday.

Purchasing power "will be the subject of a communication in the Council of Ministers before the legislative elections (June 12 and 19, editor's note) to present the major measures", she assured.

“Then a draft law and an amending finance bill will be detailed in the Council of Ministers on June 29 for a presentation to the Assembly in stride,” she added.

Borne wants to extend the "tariff shield"

Olivia Grégoire, on behalf of the government, had put forward the idea, on May 25, of a "first bill (...) adopted by the Council of Ministers before the legislative elections".

The government then backpedaled, a government source explaining that the two texts would be presented "after the legislative elections".

And that, reserve period obliges, there would be “no precise amount” revealed.

On Friday, Élisabeth Borne explained that the first texts that the deputies will have to examine would be intended to "continue to contain this surge in energy prices" with in particular the extension of the "tariff shield" on the prices of gas and oil. electricity.

La Nupes in the sights of Macronie

Olivia Grégoire also strongly criticized the Nupes, seeing in it "a constituency agreement, not an agreement of conviction".

"Jean-Luc Mélenchon does not want a majority to move the country forward, but a minority to block it," she added, explaining that the leader of rebellious France "has been accumulating mandates for 35 years now".

"In the end, what is in his balance sheet? Nothing. He seeks to exist, not to govern," she said.

Finally, on pensions, the government spokeswoman assured that "the pace of the reform is being discussed" and that this pace "is neither a totem nor a taboo".