the Prime Minister is the guest this Thursday of “4 Truths” on France 2 to explain her roadmap

What there is to know

What does the government intend to do during the 100 days “of appeasement” And “action” asked by Emmanuel Macron to turn the page on the conflict on pensions? Elisabeth Borne is invited to “4 Truths” on France 2, Thursday April 27 from 7:30 a.m., the day after the presentation of her roadmap. The Prime Minister has promised to initiate many projects, but her most commented announcement was the postponement of the immigration law until the fall, for lack of a majority. Follow his interview in our live.

A renunciation at the heart of the comments. “There is no majority to vote for such a text”said Elisabeth Borne on Wednesday to justify the postponement of the immigration law. “We are not facing an admission of powerlessness”, assured the government spokesman, Olivier Véran. The Republicans, singled out by the Prime Minister for their attitude, have announced their intention to file their own text on the subject. The government “can no longer govern”commented Jean-Luc Mélenchon, while Marine Le Pen believed that the executive had no “nothing more to say or to offer”.

Work, health and climate among the main projects. Detailing the government roadmap, Elisabeth Borne announced additional places in nursing training, an offer to rent non-polluting vehicles and the deployment of additional police and gendarmes at the Italian border.

A busy schedule. The Prime Minister also mentioned numerous texts to come: the bill on employment will be presented in June, that on the sharing of value in companies before the summer, while a “work life pact” must be negotiated with the unions. A text for “securing the digital space” will be presented in May.

A page really turned? Government announcements aim to open a new sequence after the eventful pension reform. However, pan concerts are multiplying during ministerial trips at the start of the week. “We are perfectly aware that the pension reform will be remembered”explained the Minister of Labour, Olivier Dussopt, in Le Figaro (article for subscribers) Wednesday evening, while calling for “to advance” on other measures.

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