Despite the approval of the text of the pension reform after the failure of the motions of censure, the mobilization and the opposition have not abated. In every country, thousands of people demonstrated on Monday.
Questioned during the questions to the Government in the National Assembly on Tuesday, Élisabeth Borne judged that “the verbal violence” of the rebel deputies “overflowed yesterday in the street”, while certain rallies were dotted with degradations, but also with police violence on Monday at night. .
“A Hate Record”
“Words have a meaning,” launched the Prime Minister, denouncing “a record of hate that is now your habit.” She was responding to a question from the president of the LFI group in the National Assembly, Mathilde Panot, who called for “popular censorship” of the reform and the government.
“They are going to give in because the risk of an outbreak of anger is already too great, because the police alone will not be able to bring order and because a whim of the president does not deserve to threaten the civil peace of the country,” he said. the rebel deputy
An “anti-parliamentary” line
While Mathilde Panot accused Élisabeth Borne “of attacking the right to strike and of demonstrating with requisition and repression”, the Prime Minister responded: “As expected, she has no more words to condemn the violence.”
“They continue relentlessly with their systematic attack on the republican institutions and are attacking the police and the gendarmes,” he denounced.
Elisabeth Borne accused LFI of maintaining an “anti-parliamentary” political line “by dint of opposing the legitimacy of the street to Parliament”.
Source: BFM TV
