Six key points to note from french prime minister’s recent interview

Six key points to note from french prime minister’s recent interview


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FUEL AID, TAXES, MEDICAL FEES AND TACKLING CRIME WERE AMONG THE TOPICS COVERED BY ELISABETH BORNE Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne has sought to reassure people living in France about changes


over the coming months, including saying that the government will not raise taxes. She spoke after the first cabinet meeting of the new political year, as parliament resumed on Wednesday,


August 22 after its summer recess. She made six key points. > Enfant tué dans une fusillade à Nîmes : "Il faudra absolument que > les auteurs puissent être punis à la hauteur du 


drame que vit sa > famille", estime @Elisabeth_Borne, invitée de l'émission #MaFrance > pic.twitter.com/h14D8WMQ25 > — ici (@ici_officiel) August 23, 2023 TAXES ON


HOUSEHOLDS ‘WILL NOT RISE’ Ms Borne dismissed press rumours of tax rises saying: “There is no question of increasing household taxes, rather the opposite.” She added: “It is not at all the


government's philosophy to raise taxes on households. On the contrary, we want to continue to lower taxes [and] pay attention to the purchasing power of the middle classes." The


PM, however, accepted that local authorities still have the option to increase the taxe foncière property owners’ tax, which has risen BY AN AVERAGE OF 7% NATIONWIDE THIS YEAR. Some


authorities have been accused of trying to claw back income after the abolition of the _taxe d’habitation_ for main homes. However, Ms Borne said that she had “no doubt” that local


authorities would also be “attentive to the purchasing power of our fellow citizens”. NO ALCOHOL TAX RISE…BUT NO FUEL HELP Prime Minister Borne also said that there were “no plans” to


increase taxes on alcohol despite some claims to the contrary. However, she did say that the government would not be reintroducing another _chèque carburant_ (fuel aid) to help with the cost


of vehicle fuel. The government had previously offered discounts at the fuel pumps and a_ chèque carburant_ for heavy users as a means to combat rising fuel prices. PRESCRIPTION AND


TREATMENT CHARGES Ms Borne also spoke about _franchises médicales_, small fees paid where receiving medication, treatment, or transport that is reimbursed by the Assurance maladie.


Introduced in 2008, these are part of the cost paid for by the patient, where applicable, for medicines that benefit from state reimbursement. The fees are currently set at €0.50 per box of


medicine or consultation (and €2 per transport trip), and capped at a maximum of €50 per year per patient. READ MORE: WHAT IS FRANCE’S ‘FRANCHISE MÉDICALE’ FEE AND WHY MIGHT IT GO UP SOON?


However, Ms Borne admitted that the government was considering the possibility of increasing the fee. She said: “It is not a question of preventing people from seeking treatment…[and we want


to] protect both the very vulnerable, those with the lowest income, and also patients with long-term or chronic conditions… [However] we are a country which consumes more medicines, for


example more antibiotics, than our neighbours.” FIGHT AGAINST SO-CALLED ‘HEAT SINKS’ Ms Borne also addressed the problem of so-called ‘heat sinks’ in some areas, especially cities, which can


cause heat to accumulate and intensify already-dangerous heatwave conditions. It comes after France experienced its hottest day on record for the post-August 15 period, on Tuesday, August


22. Temperatures have also regularly exceeded 40C in the Rhône Valley this summer. Ms Borne said that the government would put more resources into home renovation and support people who want


to make their properties more eco-friendly and better prepared to deal with higher temperatures. She said that the government would also seek to provide better advice [for homeowners] on


how to find the right tradespeople to carry out the right work and ensure effective insulation. RESPONSE TO NÎMES SHOOTING, AND MORE POLICE RESOURCES In response to the fatal shooting of a


10-year-old boy in Nîmes, Ms Borne said: “It is absolutely essential that the perpetrators are punished in a way that is commensurate with the tragedy that the family is going through.” She


added that the government also wants to provide more resources for the police and the justice system and had passed a law in spring to “strengthen the resources of the justice system and to


deploy police officers in local neighbourhoods to ensure residents’ peace and quiet”. She said: “I am fully aware that there are certain neighbourhoods where drug dealing can make life


absolutely impossible for residents,” she said. “We will be uncompromising in bringing back the security that the residents of this district of Nîmes are understandably expecting.” WARNING


TO POSSIBLE PM CHALLENGER Responding to the news that Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin has designs on the position of prime minister in 2027, Ms Borne said: “2027 is a long way off.” She


said that she was currently more concerned with maintaining the “cohesion of the government, the effectiveness of the government's action and the unity of the majority”. She added that


“Gérald Darmanin is at work” and carrying out his duties as interior minister effectively. READ ALSO WHO IS WHO IN FRANCE’S NEW-LOOK GOVERNMENT? ÉLISABETH BORNE: SIX FACTS ABOUT FRANCE’S NEW


PRIME MINISTER