Legislation passed through the French parliament late-Tuesday night curbs the number of migrants allowed into the European nation, strengthens requirements for French citizenship, streamlines migrant expulsion procedures, and delays access to state benefits for those wishing to migrate to France.
“Political life consists of crises, of agreements and of disagreements,” said Emmanuel Macron in response to the passage of a new French law cracking down on illegal migrants and enacting new migration quotas.
The law is a culmination of negotiations between Macron’s political allies in the parliament and Marine Le Pen’s National Rally party in the French National Assembly. While many French citizens, as well as Le Pen and her political allies, saw the immigration deal as a tremendous victory for France, Macron’s ruling coalition descended into a degree of infighting. Aurélien Rousseau, Macron’s health minister, resigned from government in protest fo the laws passage.
Macron himself insisted he had not “betrayed” voters who chose him over Le Pen during the last 2022 French elections. On Wednesday he said, regarding the law: “It is a shield that we needed.”
Tension among the French over the country’s immigration policies have driven talks of a possible national referendum on the subject. The move to deport illegal immigrants from the country could face opposition from the European Court of Human Rights.
“We used to wait until we had the opinion [of the European Court of Human Rights] even if that meant keeping extremely dangerous people on our soil. Now we don’t wait. We expel and we wait to see what the court is going to say. The consequence of that is indeed a fine,” said France’s Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin in October.