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Oct 30, 2025

French National Assembly Votes to Denounce 1968 Franco-Algerian Immigration Agreement

French National Assembly Votes to Denounce 1968 Franco-Algerian Immigration Agreement
In a razor-thin vote late on 30 October, France’s National Assembly adopted—185 votes to 184—a non-binding resolution introduced by Marine Le Pen’s Rassemblement National (RN) calling on the government to “denounce” the 1968 Franco-Algerian agreement that gives Algerian nationals preferential immigration, residence and work rights in France.

Background & context The 1968 accord allows Algerians to obtain multi-year residence permits after just three years of lawful stay and exempts them from France’s standard labour-market tests. Successive governments have criticised the treaty but never moved to scrap it, fearing diplomatic fallout with Algiers and the potential loss of visa-issuance cooperation on deportations.

How the vote happened The far-right RN capitalised on its allotted “niche parlementaire” day to force the issue. Twenty-six Les Républicains (LR) MPs, 17 centrists from Horizons and two LIOT deputies broke ranks, giving the RN its first legislative victory under the Fifth Republic. Renaissance and MoDem deputies largely abstained or were absent, prompting a backlash from the left, which denounced the result as a “historic breach” of the republican cordon sanitaire.

Business & mobility implications Although purely symbolic, the resolution intensifies pressure on the executive to overhaul or terminate the treaty. If Paris eventually moves to cancel the agreement, the roughly 900,000 Algerian citizens living in France—and thousands of cross-border Algerian contractors—could face stricter visa categories, longer processing times and higher salary thresholds. Multinationals that rely on Algerian engineers, IT specialists or seasonal workers should begin contingency workforce planning.

Next steps The Élysée alone can withdraw from the treaty. Doing so would trigger a one-year notice period under Article 56 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties. Algiers has already warned of “grave consequences” for consular cooperation if Paris acts. Expect an uptick in bilateral negotiations and possible reciprocal measures on French citizens in Algeria.
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