who are the fourteen deputies and senators who will make up the joint committee?

These elected officials, mostly in favor of the project, will meet on Wednesday at the National Assembly to find a compromise for a vote the next day in both parliamentary chambers.

The fate of the pension reform is partly in their hands. Seven deputies and seven senators will be called, Wednesday, March 15, from 9 a.m., to find a compromise on the pension reform bill within a joint joint committee. The presidential majority and the Republicans are largely represented there, with nine incumbents out of 14, which suggests an agreement between these parties in favor of raising the starting age from 62 to 64 years. “The government would be wrong to think that it will be easy”however, warned the head of the LR senators, Bruno Retailleau, on Sunday.

>> Pension reform: follow the reactions to the Senate vote live

Set by the National Assembly on Friday and by the Senate on Thursday, the composition of the CMP was formalized on Saturday in the Official Journal. Among the seven deputies called to sit at the Bourbon palace as holders, the left has only one representative, the RN also having only one elected:

Fadila Khattabi (Renaissance), Member of Parliament for Côte-d’Or, President of the Assembly’s Social Affairs Committee
Stephanie Rist (Renaissance), MP for Loiret, General Rapporteur of the Assembly’s Social Affairs Committee
Sylvain Maillard (Renaissance), deputy for Paris, vice-president of the Renaissance group in the Assembly
Thomas Menage (National Rally), deputy for Loiret, spokesperson for the RN group in the Assembly
Mathilde Panot (La France insoumise), deputy for Val-de-Marne, president of the LFI-Nupes group in the Assembly
Olivier Marleix (Les Républicains), deputy for Eure-et-Loir, president of the LR group in the Assembly
Philippe Vigier (MoDem), MP for Eure-et-Loir

The left is more represented among the substitutes, with three representatives. Here is the list: Éric Woerth (Renaissance), Laure Lavalette (National Rally), Hadrien Clouet (La France insoumise), Arthur Delaporte (Socialist Party), Paul Christophe (Horizons), Sandrine Rousseau (Europe Ecologie-Les Verts), Charles de Courson (The Centrists).

Five out of seven senators voted for

The Senate has appointed three elected LRs, a Renaissance and a UDI, who voted for the text, and two socialists, who voted against.

Catherine Deroche (Les Républicains), Senator for Maine-et-Loire, President of the Senate Social Affairs Committee
Rene-Paul Savary (Les Républicains), senator from Marne, rapporteur of the bill on pension reform in the Senate
Philippe Moiller (Les Républicains), Senator for Deux-Sèvres, Vice-Chairman of the Senate Social Affairs Committee
Elizabeth Doineau (UDI), Senator for Mayenne, General Rapporteur of the Senate Social Affairs Committee
Monique Lubin (Socialist Party), Senator for Landes
Corinne Feret (Socialist Party), Senator for Calvados
Xavier Iacovelli (Renaissance), Senator for Hauts-de-Seine

The list of their alternates is as follows: Alain Milon (Les Républicains), Pascale Gruny (Les Républicains), Chantal Deseyne (Les Républicains), Sylvie Vermeillet (Radical Party, center), Raymonde Poncet Monge (Europe Ecology-The Greens), Henri Cabanel (various left) and Cathy Apourceau-Poly (Communist Party).


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