On First Day, French PM Promises 'Rupture' and Moves Toward New Pension Talks
6 Articles
6 Articles
What if Sébastien Lecornu's arrival signifies the return of a conclave on pensions? For the CFDT, it is not even worth thinking about it when the new Prime Minister is considering reopening the file.
The CFDT, one of the three unions to have discussed until the end of the conclave on pensions launched by François Bayrou, also called for the abolition of the 2023 reform.
The union, which seemed ready to swallow the 64-year-olds on condition of collective recognition of penitibility, hardened the tone at the time when Sébastien Lecornu was considering reopening the file.
The CFDT closed the door on Thursday, September 11, to the idea of a revival, by the new Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu, of the discussions on pensions that had failed last June. For the union, the only possible way is to suspend the reform of 2023 and to return the future choices to 2027.
On Thursday, the CFDT declared itself opposed to a possible reopening of the conclave on pensions in the context of the change of Prime Minister, and called for the suspension of the reform of 2023, which reduces the age of departure to 64 years. "For the CFDT, there is no question of relaunching the conclave...
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