After months of gridlock, the government finally introduced back the draft legislation in the Senate in November 2023: the conservative-controlled
upper house substantially toughened the bill, with the Interior Minister's support on several occasions. The Senate passed the heavily amended bill in first reading on 14 November. On 27 November 2023, the bill began its process in the National Assembly: the Macronist-led Law Committee thoroughly amended the Senate-approved draft, stamping out or lessening the majority of the upper house's changes. On 11 December 2023, the report stage in the National Assembly began with a vote on a preliminary dismissal
motion tabled by
Green MPs: the motion was unexpectedly passed in a 270–265 vote, meaning the bill was defeated without further consideration in the lower house. The vote, marking the first time a sitting government was defeated on such motion in 15 years, effectively plunged the
executive branch into crisis. Darmanin offered his resignation to Macron later in the evening, but Macron refused it. RN party leader
Jordan Bardella called on the President to dissolve the National Assembly while left-wing opposition parties called on the government to ditch the draft legislation. After the vote, the Prime Minister convened her cabinet for a crisis meeting to seek a way forward, ultimately leading to the decision to send the bill to a conservative-dominated joint parliamentary committee rather than ditching the bill or sending it back to the Senate. Borne, now the
de facto chief negotiator with
The Republicans (LR) over the immigration legislation, met with LR leaders on multiple occasions both ahead of and during the joint committee stage: despite difficult talks and divisions inside the Macronist camp between left and right-leaning members, the negotiations led to a last-minute two-chapter agreement between the government and LR leadership. In the first part of this informal deal, the government would agree to support major LR-endorsed changes to the bill, ditching many previous red lines and getting the final bill closer to the version passed by the Senate. In the second part of the deal, the Prime Minister solemnly promised that the government would overhaul the controversial "State Medical Assistance" (AME) system, a mechanism allowing illegal migrants to access
Social Security-funded medical care on conditions, in a separate bill. The scope of the concessions made to the right created concern for a number of Macronist MPs and party grandees. On 19 December, the joint committee agreed on a drastically hardened bill, with measures limiting foreigners' access to social benefits, reforming
Jus soli, restricting
family reunification procedures and the implementation of a "return deposit" for foreign students coming from outside the
EU among other things. Immediately after the finalized version of the bill was made public, parliamentary RN party leader Marine Le Pen hailed an "ideological victory" and announced that her MPs would support the legislation in the National Assembly. Le Pen's decision prompted panic and confusion inside Macron's ranks, with large swathes of centrist MPs, already set off-balance by the deal struck with the conservatives, now refusing to vote along Le Pen on immigration matters. Additionally, prominent left-leaning ministers, such as Culture Minister
Rima Abdul-Malak, Health Minister
Aurélien Rousseau or Transports deputy minister
Clément Beaune among others, reportedly met in the evening of the 19 December and threatened to resign if the bill was passed later that day. After convening a crisis meeting at the
Élysée Palace, President Macron, advised to do so by close ally and
MoDem party leader
François Bayrou, tried to reassure his troops by announcing that he would not sign the bill into law, instead sending it back later to Parliament, if the legislation was approved thanks to RN votes in the National Assembly. In the evening of the 19 December 2023, both houses of Parliament passed the immigration & asylum bill, 214–114 in the Senate and then 349–186 in the National Assembly. In the lower house, 59 Macronist MPs (almost a quarter of the centrist coalition's MPs) defied the government either by abstaining (32) or voting against it (27), the largest parliamentary rebellion against a sitting government since the 1970s. == Government turmoil ==