French PM Suspends Macron’s Pension Reform Until After 2027 in Bid to Stabilize Government
Lecornu pauses controversial retirement-age law to defuse no-confidence threat and win Socialist support
Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu has announced he will freeze the implementation of President Macron’s 2023 pension reform, which raised the retirement age from 62 to 64, until after the 2027 presidential election.
The suspension aims to shore up his fragile minority government ahead of looming no-confidence votes from both left-wing and right-wing factions.
Lecornu committed to not increasing the retirement age again until January 2028 and pledged to restore full parliamentary debate rather than use constitutional shortcuts.
He also confirmed that the suspension will incur significant fiscal costs—€400 million in 2026 and €1.8 billion in 2027—affecting an estimated 3.5 million people, which he said must be offset by savings elsewhere.
The move appears driven by political necessity: Lecornu faces two no-confidence motions this week from the far-right National Rally and the far-left France Unbowed.
Neither block commands enough votes to topple the government alone, but allied support from the Socialist Party is seen as decisive.
Socialist leaders have publicly welcomed the reform suspension as a step toward negotiation and forbearance.
The pension overhaul was originally enacted in 2023 using Article 49.3 of the French Constitution to bypass a full parliamentary vote.
It had provoked widespread protest and remains deeply unpopular.
Finance Minister Roland Lescure previously warned that modifying the law would cost hundreds of millions to billions of euros in coming years, and the government had resisted changes until now.
Lecornu, who was recently reappointed following a government reshuffle, framed the suspension as a necessary “pause” to preserve stability and consensus.
As part of his first policy address, he also pledged new taxes on high earners and large companies, while ruling out reintroducing a wealth tax.
The pension suspension is likely to reshape the parliamentary dynamics in coming days and may delay further reform efforts until after the 2027 election.