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Radio France Internationale
Radio France Internationale
National

French government promises action on spending immediately after elections

France's Prime Minister and parliamentary candidate Elisabeth Borne. AFP - SAMEER AL-DOUMY

The government of French Prime Minister, Elisabeth Borne, meeting for the first time on Monday, has promised to table a bill containing measures to increase the spending power of consumers, immediately after the parliamentary elections in June.

Two topics dominated Monday's inaugural council meeting of the Elisabeth Borne government.

Apart from the promise of legislative action to boost spending power in the immediate wake of June elections, the government has had to face a major problem as the Solidarity Minister, Damien Abad, faces accusations of rape from two women.

"The government is fully supportive of those women who have the enormous courage to speak out, if they are victims of sexual harassment," said government spokesperson, Olivia Grégoire.

"But the establishment of the facts in all such cases must be left to the courts."

Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne had a long discussion with Damien Abad on Sunday night.

Full employment possible

In handing over the Employment Ministry to her successor, Olivier Dussopt, Borne said she was certain that the end of unemployment was in sight.

"Unemployment is at its lowest level for 15 years," the prime minister said, "youth unemployment is at a 40-year low. We have never seen so many French people with jobs," the prime minister said.

The technical level at which full employment is achieved is when the unemplyment statistics fall below 5.5 percent. The figure for the first three months of this year is 7.3 percent.

The prime minister is due to meet employer organisations and the trade unions later this week.

'You face unprecedented challenges'

President Emmanuel Macron told the new government that he wants them to act to "reunite" the nation, in the face of "unprecedented challenges".

The French leader went on to identify the war in Ukraine, the slow recovery from the Covid epidemic, and the social and political divisions in French society as the chief of those challenges.

"You are part of a government of continuity and of change," the president told his ministers. "Your principal job will be to consolidate what has been achieved over the past five years, and launch completely new efforts, innovate both in the form and the content of the laws you propose."

The priorities of the new ministers are to be education, health and the environment.

Fifteen of the 28 members of the new team have now to ensure their election to parliament in the June Assembly elections.

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