Did everyone have a good weekend?

  

  Have you been screened by protests and riots in Paris and France?

  The fuse is still the retirement reform that has been going on for so long. Last week, Marco and the Prime Minister forcibly passed a big move, which caught everyone off guard, and then caused trouble: France after the retirement reform was forcibly passed: Nous Somersen Guerre. …

  (Paris 13 on Saturday night)

  So, on Monday, where did things go?

  Let’s follow up!

  First of all, just after last week, motion of no confidence.

  Not surprisingly, late on Friday, two motion of no confidence’s for Bill 49.3 were submitted to Parliament:

  One was put forward jointly by Liberté s, Indé pendants, Outre-mer et Territoriales (LIOT), and the other was put forward by Rassemblement national led by Le Pen.

  After a 48-hour wait over the weekend, at 4 o’clock this afternoon, the two motions will be formally examined and voted.

  The whole process is complicated, and the editorial department briefly summarized it for everyone:

  First, all parties and groups in Parliament will send a representative to express their views on motion of no confidence, and the government can respond, and then Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne will speak.

  After all the speeches, it is expected that motion of no confidence will be voted at 6 pm. The voting will be open, and the list of members who voted for the motion will be published on the website of the National Assembly a few minutes after the results are announced.

  The two motions were voted separately. The one proposed by Liot group was voted first, and the results will be announced half an hour after voting. If this item is not passed, then the parliament will vote on the second motion.

  If either of the two motions is successfully passed, the resignation of the Prime Minister is basically a foregone conclusion, and the reform bill will also be rejected. At the same time, Marco will also face a choice:

  Re-appoint the Prime Minister to form a new government, choose another Prime Minister, or dissolve the National Assembly. …

  Looking back here, this happened when Charles de Gaulle was president, when Charles de Gaulle chose to dissolve the parliament.

  If the vote is not passed, then the reform bill will be regarded as passed.

  However, the opposition said that if this happens, they will appeal to the Constitutional Council, which will review part or all of the bill. But this is basically the final game. If it is approved, Marco will be able to formally promulgate the reform bill and the pension reform will be settled.

  As of last night’s latest statistics, at least 261 members of Parliament have indicated their intention to vote for motion of no confidence. This number is already a lot, but as we said last week, it takes 287 votes to pass motion of no confidence.

  So now, about 30 LR party members who have not made a clear statement on the motion vote have become the key for both parties, and the number of them who voted will be decisive.

  According to French media reports, they actually planned to vote against the reform bill before the Prime Minister used 49.3. So now the opposition feels that it is very promising to win them over, and they have been calling on them to vote and releasing words:

  There are already 10 to 15 LR representatives who have expressed their intention to vote for the motion!

  I don’t know if it’s psychological warfare or true, but anyway, if you calculate it, the number of votes is really fierce. Maybe this afternoon will be a key game with one vote and two votes!

  So, what is the attitude of the French people?

  According to the latest opinion poll of BFMTV, 68% of French people hope that today’s vote will be passed, and the government will fall.

  Not only that, even if motion of no confidence fails, 68% of French people still want Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne to resign …

  Speaking of it, it is really difficult for the Prime Minister. Although everyone knows that this decision is meant by Marco, there is no way. She announced and assumed the corresponding responsibilities, and it has become a target of public criticism since Friday:

  All kinds of accusations and abuse came like a flood. Even the Prime Minister’s social media account may have been attacked too much by the water army at the weekend. It was once closed and later set up as a private account.

  There is even internal news that the Prime Minister couldn’t hold back his tears after he announced it.

  Moreover, this vote has not yet started, but there are already people on the Prime Minister’s side who can’t carry it! Directeur de cabinet of the Prime Minister has resigned!

  It has been less than a year since Marco was re-elected in May last year, and former Prime Minister Castex resigned according to tradition, and Elisabeth Borne was appointed as Prime Minister. Maybe he will really resign tonight, which may be the shortest prime minister in France in recent years …

  So, what will be the result?

  Will it witness history?

  Will it once again set off a protest climax in France?

  Let’s continue to pay attention together!


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