Olivier Dussopt wants to appease, and this notably involves the method.
While an immigration law must arrive in Parliament in the coming months, the ex-PS Labor Minister - who co-drafted the initial text with his ex-LR interior colleague Gérald Darmanin - hopes to succeed in "building a
majority
".
Objective: "
do everything to avoid
" the 49-3, whose use on the highly contested pension reform has tensed even in the ranks of the majority.
In a context of relative majority, the passage in force is however "
obviously part of the hypotheses, systematically
", he recognized.
This, even though Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne has already publicly indicated that she does not wish to use the “joker” which authorizes her to use this constitutional tool once per parliamentary session, excluding budgetary texts.
"
There is a principle: it is that each time we can build a majority, we build a majority
", underlined Olivier Dussopt.
Read alsoÉlisabeth Borne announces that she no longer wants to use 49.3 outside of budgetary texts
In his eyes, it seems “
important
” that this text not only be “
adopted
”, but that it be “
under good conditions
”.
It is therefore "
important
" to continue according to him "
to work to form this majority
".
A goal for a time deemed unattainable by Emmanuel Macron, who therefore saw fit to announce on March 22 a division of his project “
into several texts
”.
What the right - which the majority hopes for support - was immediately opposed.
As a result, the head of state finally backpedaled in an interview "facing the readers" of Le
Parisien
, saying he wanted "
an effective and fair law, in a single text
".
Without any guarantee, however, as the creation of a residence permit for “short-term occupations” remains controversial.