A small step that still does not convince. Although Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne assured this Sunday in the JDDD that she wanted to “move” when it comes to long careers, some deputies from the right-wing party remain dissatisfied.
Invited this Sunday morning on BFMTV, the deputy for Pas-de-Calais Pierre-Henri Dumont said he was “very dissatisfied” with the Prime Minister’s new proposal. “To be in a long-career scheme, you must have contributed before age X or Y -there it goes back to 20 or 21 years- for at least 5 quarters. Yes, but 5 quarters at minimum wage. But when you are an apprentice, for example, you are not up to date with the minimum wage, especially when you are under 18 years of age, ”he explained.
A “reform” not “ambitious”
Beyond this particular point, the elected official goes further and stops the reform as a whole. An output that shows a little more the dissensions that may exist between the two parties as a decisive week begins for the text.
“The problem with this reform is that it is a small reform, it is a reform. An ambitious reform had to be carried out.”
Source: BFM TV
