Politics. LFI will submit a bill to repeal the Duplomb law during its next session.

La France Insoumise will submit in its next parliamentary "niche" in the National Assembly a bill to repeal the entire Duplomb law on agriculture, after the Constitutional Council's partial censure of its most contested provision on a pesticide , Mathilde Panot announced Sunday during a speech at the radical left movement's summer universities.
"Thanks to the exceptional mobilization that took place during the summer, thanks to the appeal that we, the Insoumis, filed with the Constitutional Council, we have won a first victory," she said.
"There are only horrors left in this law."But "there are absolutely nothing but horrors left in this law," said the Val-de-Marne MP, accusing it of "favoring factory farms (...) and mega-basins." "Between the interests of money and the survival of the human species, we have to choose. And we have chosen," she added.
The next parliamentary "niche" of La France Insoumise, the day during which a group sets the agenda for the Assembly, will be November 27.
The Duplomb law, intended to lift restrictions on farming, was adopted by Parliament in early July with the support of Macron supporters, the Left and the far right, and has been the subject of a widespread protest movement, including within the scientific community.
A record petitionA petition calling for its repeal has gathered more than 2.1 million signatures on the National Assembly website, an unprecedented number, allowing for a future, essentially symbolic, debate to be held in the Assembly.
On August 7, the Constitutional Council censored the most controversial provision of the Duplomb law, which provided for the conditional reintroduction of a banned neonicotinoid pesticide. The following week, Emmanuel Macron signed the law into law, ruling out the possibility of requesting a new parliamentary deliberation.
Le Bien Public