Laura Laplaud 8:37 a.m., March 13, 2023, modified at 8:40 a.m., March 13, 2023

After the National Assembly, the Senate, the joint joint committee, will the government have to draw article 49.3 of the Constitution to have its pension reform adopted?

For Éric Woerth, quaestor of the National Assembly, guest of Europe Matin on Monday, the option of forceful passage "is not one of weakness".

After its tumultuous passage in the National Assembly and then in the Senate in recent days, the pension reform bill arrives in the joint committee (CMP) this Wednesday.

If the CMP fails to find common ground between the two parties, the government, which does not wish it, could have recourse to 49.3 to force the final adoption of the text. 

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

Is it still possible to avoid recourse to 49.3?

This article of the Constitution is in no way "an admission of weakness", estimated Éric Woerth, quaestor of the National Assembly and Renaissance deputy for Oise, at the microphone of Europe 1 on Monday.

"It is the observation of a situation as it is and it is an admission of realism and pragmatism. I think that we can achieve a majority by continuing to discuss."

>> More information to follow...