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Energy law, public broadcasting reform, voting methods... A hectic schedule for Parliament

Energy law, public broadcasting reform, voting methods... A hectic schedule for Parliament
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The parliamentary agenda, disrupted by two extraordinary sessions this week and again at the start of the school year, is very busy.
In front of the National Assembly, during a demonstration in support of the Radio-France group against the public broadcasting reform project led by Rachida Dati, Minister of Culture, in Paris, June 30, 2025. (Denis Allard/Libération)

The air is heavy and the end of the parliamentary session is awaited. A year after the early legislative elections , the deputies do not hide their weariness, many deploring a degraded legislative work and struggling to plan ahead, faced with the threat of a new dissolution. The only horizon, for elected officials who often prefer to work in their constituencies: the end of the extraordinary session, Friday, July 11. The deputies should complete their work with the final adoption, on Thursday, of the reform of the voting system in Paris, Lyon and Marseille .

Less than nine months before the municipal elections of March 2026, the text intends to put an end to the procedure put in place in 1982, according to which the voters of the three cities vote in each district for a list of councilors; the elected officials at the top of the list sit

Libération

Libération

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