
PARIS (AP) — France’s lower house of parliament narrowly approved on Tuesday a key health care budget bill, offering the minority government some relief from political turmoil at the cost of suspending President Emmanuel Macron's flagship pension reform.
The bill passed by 247 votes in favor while 234 lawmakers voted against.
The Social Security budget includes the suspension of Macron’s unpopular pension changes, which raise the retirement age from 62 to 64, until after the next presidential election in 2027.
With no majority at the National Assembly, centrist Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu offered to put the reform on hold as a concession to the Socialists, who voted for the bill. The move aims to prevent his fragile minority government from being toppled.
French politics have been in turmoil since Macron called early parliamentary elections in June last year which resulted in a deeply fragmented legislature.
Macron appointed Lecornu, 39, in September after budget debates led to the fall of previous prime ministers. Lecornu promised he would seek compromises with lawmakers from the left and the right to pass bills.
Lecornu will soon face another major hurdle as lawmakers prepare to vote later this month on the state budget for 2026. The prime minister vowed to prioritize decreasing France's ballooning deficit.
France’s previous prime minister was ousted over plans to cut 44 billion euros ($51 billion) in public spending, meant to rein in debt of the European Union’s second-largest economy.
France’s deficit hit 5.8% of gross domestic product last year, way above the official EU target of 3%.
The country has a high level of public spending driven by generous social welfare programs, health care and education — and a heavy tax burden that falls short of covering the costs.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Supportive Tips On Home loans For First-Time Home Purchasers - 2
Turning into a Distributed Writer: My Composing Process - 3
Wegmans recalls mixed nuts over salmonella contamination fears - 4
Violence 'never part' of break-in plan, court told - 5
As infant botulism cases climb to 31, recalled ByHeart baby formula is still on some store shelves
Pfizer in $41.5 million settlement with Texas over ADHD drug for children
Middle East hotels hit pandemic-era lows amid Iran war
One of the best meteor showers of the year peaks at the worst possible time this week
Horror and fear in West Bank as Israel approves hanging Palestinians convicted of murdering Israelis
Help Your Efficiency: 10 Authoritative Apparatuses to Attempt
How the Iran war may affect your money and bills
Activist vessel collides with krill trawler in Antarctic confrontation
'Backward and upward and tilted': Spaceflight causes astronauts' brains to shift inside their skulls
The most effective method to Integrate Compact disc Rates into Your Retirement Arranging













