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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

French PM seeks to turn page after pensions fight

French PM addresses a press conference after the weekly cabinet meeting at the Elysee Presidential palace in Paris. — AFP
French PM addresses a press conference after the weekly cabinet meeting at the Elysee Presidential palace in Paris. — AFP
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PARIS: France's Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne on Wednesday pledged to cut unemployment and make industry greener as she sought to turn the page on months of unrest over a contentious pension reform.


"I only believe in results. We need to obtain some in all areas, and I hope for them to be concrete, tangible, visible for French people," she told reporters as she announced her government's next steps.


Borne has been the unpopular face of President Emmanuel Macron's flagship pension reform to raise the retirement age from 62 to 64, which he signed into law earlier this month despite repeated mass protests.


She invoked a controversial executive power to push the bill through parliament without a vote last month, and is now under more pressure than ever to find a majority to back any future legislation in its hung lower house.


Borne on Wednesday laid out the details of a 100-day target to relaunch Macron's second term in office after his re-election in April 2022.


Her government would aim to improve work conditions, reduce unemployment, and make French industry more environmentally friendly among other measures, she said.


But a new bill on immigration, expected to be the next hot topic after the pension debate, would not be presented until the autumn for lack of consensus.


"There is no majority to vote through such a bill," Borne said.


And "it's not the moment to launch a debate on a topic that could divide the country."


She said some 150 extra policemen would however be deployed to the Italian border to battle illegal immigration.


The pension reform has sparked mass strikes and protests across the country, and eroded Macron's popularity just a year into his second term.


After months of keeping a low profile, the president has, since signing the law, embarked on trips around the country to meet members of the public face-to-face.


But he has been greeted by pan-bashing protesters on most of these forays into provincial France.


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