This actually seems to trim back a number of the Presidents powers, so I wouldn't call it crowning him.Parliamentarians in France have approved plans by President Nicolas Sarkozy to rewrite the constitution - by the slimmest of margins.
The bill was backed by 539 votes to 357 - one vote more than the three-fifths majority of the combined Assembly and Senate required to pass the reforms.
Mr Sarkozy says the reforms will strengthen France's parliament, which is often seen as weak.
But the opposition says they will turn the country into a "monocracy".
The Socialists said the new bill would be the equivalent of crowning Mr Sarkozy king.
It is French democracy that has won
French President Nicolas Sarkozy
"While we were hoping for progress for democracy, you are offering us consolidation of 'monocracy'," Socialist senator Bernard Frimat told lawmakers before the vote at a special session at the Chateau of Versailles.
The reform bill represents the biggest shake-up in the way France is run since the constitution was introduced by Charles de Gaulle in 1958, observers say.
The vote is a victory for President Sarkozy who made overhauling France's Constitution one of his key election pledges, the BBC's Emma Jane Kirby in Paris says.
'Movement, change, modernity'
Mr Sarkozy, while on a trip to Dublin to discuss the future of the EU's Lisbon Treaty, hailed the news that his reforms had passed.
French President Nicolas Sarkozy. File photo
President Sarkozy said he was "absolutely delighted" by the outcome
"It is French democracy that has won," he said.
"The camp of movement, change, modernity has won over the camp of immobility, of rigidity, of sectarianism."
The most contentious part of the bill has been a plan to allow the president to address parliament, opening up the possibility of a US State of the Union-style address.
That has not been permitted since 1875, in an attempt to keep the executive and legislative branches separate.
Late concessions
Mr Sarkozy, however, says the measures will actually strengthen parliament and make the president more accountable.
The bill sets a two-term limit for presidents, gives parliament a veto over some presidential appointments, ends government control over parliament's committee system, allows parliament to set its own agenda, and ends the president's right of collective pardon.
The bill was dependent on cross-party support, leaving the outcome unclear right up to the vote.
Mr Sarkozy spent the weekend on a break with his wife Carla Bruni in Morocco, but was reported to have been calling France frequently to try to consolidate support for the moves.
Last-minute concessions failed to win the support of the opposition Socialists, the Greens and the Communists, who all said they would vote against.
Nevertheless, the bill achieved the 538 votes needed, with one to spare.
France backs constitution reform
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#1 France backs constitution reform
BBC
"it takes two sides to end a war but only one to start one. And those who do not have swords may still die upon them." Tolken
#2
Either there are details that the article didn't mention that strengthened Sarkozy, or it's just the Socialists and their allies getting pissy because they don't want the system changed (perhaps because they want to keep those powers, now lost, for whenever they retake the Presidency).
Chatniks on the (nonexistant) risks of the Large Hadron Collector:
"The chance of Shep talking his way into the control room for an ICBM is probably higher than that." - Seth
"Come on, who wouldn't trade a few dozen square miles of French countryside for Warp 3.5?" - Marina
"The chance of Shep talking his way into the control room for an ICBM is probably higher than that." - Seth
"Come on, who wouldn't trade a few dozen square miles of French countryside for Warp 3.5?" - Marina