French court denies controversial immigration law

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The controversial immigration bill that was passed on the right’s insistence was partially denied by France’s highest constitutional court on Thursday. The government welcomed the decision, but the far right was outraged.

Though a minister resigned as a result of the harsher version of the measure, which was approved last month, it remains the centerpiece reform of President Emmanuel Macron’s second term.

The measure that Macron’s government first introduced was largely maintained by the Constitutional Council, however controversial changes that were added at the behest of the far-right and right were not.

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After the ruling, Macron called on Interior Minister Gerard Darmanin to do “everything in his power” to “implement the immigration law as quickly as possible”, a member of the president’s team stated this.

Darmanin, who earlier said some measures were “clearly contrary to the constitution”, described the ruling as a win for the government.

“The Constitutional Council has approved all the government’s text,” he wrote on X, formally Twitter.

But Jordan Bardella, president of the far-right National Rally party, on X criticised what he said was a “coup by the judges, with the backing of the president”.

He called for a referendum on immigration as the “only solution”.

The decision comes as Macron seeks to curb the rapid rise of the far right, expected to make considerable gains in European elections in June.

Eric Ciotti, the leader of the right-wing Republicans, accused the council’s nine members of having “ruled according to politics not the law”.

– ‘Victory’ –
The court dismissed 32 out of 86 amendments on the grounds they were not related to the subject of the law.

They could however be accepted later as part of different legislation.

It also censured at least part of three more amendments over their essence. Among these, it partially rejected the setting of immigration quotas by parliament.

Jean-Claude Samouiller, the head of Amnesty International France, said the ruling was a “victory”.

He said the rights group would remain “vigilant” to make sure no rejected articles suddenly reappeared before it was signed into law.

The law was voted on in December after months of wrangling in parliament, where Macron’s centrist party lost an absolute majority in 2022.

Around a quarter of lawmakers in Macron’s camp voted against the bill or abstained, and health minister Aurelien Rousseau resigned.

Dozens of non-governmental organisations had slammed what they described as potentially the “most regressive” immigration law in decades.

Tens of thousands of people took to the streets across France at the weekend in protest at the law.

Macron submitted the legislation to the Constitutional Council for review in an effort to calm tensions.

But he also defended the bill, saying it was needed to reduce illegal immigration and to facilitate the integration of documented arrivals.

Some political observers had accused Macron of seeking to pass the buck onto the Constitutional Council, by submitting legislation he believes to be unconstitutional.

The Constitutional Council registered its displeasure, saying it is not “a chamber of appeal against the choices made by parliament.”

– More deportations –
It was a rare request in the history of the council, which was established by the 1958 constitution that instituted France’s Fifth Republic.

“Referring to the Constitutional Council is not a shocking solution in itself,” Anne Levade, an expert in public law, said before the decision.

But it is “of course, a little more shocking” when members of the government are convinced of “the unconstitutionality of certain provisions”, she added.

Also on Thursday, the interior ministry released its immigration figures for last year, showing France deported 17,000 people from the country, a 10-percent hike compared to 2022.

More than 323,000 people were awarded first-time residency papers, a slightly higher figure than in 2022, the ministry said.

But Darmanin said more had been handed out for “economic reasons” — students and workers — and less for families seeking reunification.

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