Laura Laplaud 8:37 a.m., January 10, 2023

Elisabeth Borne presents this Tuesday the content of the pension reform.

A text that will push back the legal age of departure from 62 to 64, to the chagrin of many workers who should express their dissatisfaction.

For Marc Ferracci, vice-president of the Renaissance group in the National Assembly, "there is not a single pension reform that has not given rise to significant mobilizations".

It is a reform that is talking about it.

The thorny pension reform will be presented this Tuesday afternoon by the Prime Minister, with according to the latest trends, a postponement of the legal retirement age from 62 to 64 years old.

A project that crystallizes the tensions in the political and social class and the government is well aware of it.

“We know that there will be mobilizations, they will be important. There is not a single pension reform that has taken place in recent years that has not given rise to significant mobilizations so we expect it “, said Marc Ferracci, vice-president of the Renaissance group in the National Assembly, at the microphone of Europe 1 on Tuesday.

>> Find the 8:13 interview in replay and podcast here

“There will necessarily be a major movement”

"There will inevitably be a large-scale movement with fairly classic demonstrations, at the call of the trade unions, at the call of certain parties, the opposition parties, the left-wing parties...", continued the rapporteur for the unemployment insurance reform who specifies that certain movements will certainly be "a little more spontaneous and autonomous".

Is pension reform necessary? 

Social movements that the executive does not fear, which considers this reform "absolutely necessary".

"We have to show that we will go all the way," said Marc Ferracci.

>> More information to follow...