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New Day of Strikes and Marches in France as Pension Anger Persists New Day of Strikes and Marches in France as Pension Anger Persists
(about 1 hour later)
Workers went on strike and demonstrators marched around France on Thursday for the first big day of protests since President Emmanuel Macron shoved an increase of the retirement age to 64 from 62 through Parliament without a full vote, a test of the unions’ ability to maintain their pressure and the president’s ability to weather it.Workers went on strike and demonstrators marched around France on Thursday for the first big day of protests since President Emmanuel Macron shoved an increase of the retirement age to 64 from 62 through Parliament without a full vote, a test of the unions’ ability to maintain their pressure and the president’s ability to weather it.
Mr. Macron’s decision last week to force through the pension bill and the subsequent failure to remove his government with a no-confidence vote ended the parliamentary battle over the overhaul, and it set the stage for the next phase: An increasingly bitter stalemate between an inflexible president and his determined opponents. Mr. Macron’s decision last week to force through the pension bill and the subsequent failure to remove his government with a no-confidence vote ended the parliamentary battle over the overhaul, and it set the stage for the next phase: An increasingly bitter stalemate.
Mr. Macron is hoping to ride out the protests until they fizzle so that the pension changes can be implemented by the end of the year. Labor unions want to sustain pressure from the street and with strikes, and they are also placing their hopes on legal challenges that Mr. Macron’s political opponents have filed against his pension overhaul. Hundreds of thousands of demonstrators were expected to take to the streets around the country for the ninth day of nationwide protests since January. One in five teachers were on strike, train service was disrupted nationwide, protesters blocked ports and roads, and famous tourist spots, like the Eiffel Tower in Paris and the nearby Château de Versailles, were shuttered.
Hundreds of thousands of demonstrators were expected to take to the streets around the country, for the ninth day of nationwide protests since January. The size of the protests will be key for the united front of labor unions that has spearheaded the marches, drawing over a million people on some occasions but failing to stop an inflexible Mr. Macron so far. “The government was counting on the movement losing steam,” Philippe Martinez, the leader of the Confédération Générale du Travail, or C.G.T., France’s second-largest union, told reporters at the protest in Paris. But, he added, “The resolve is still very strong.”
The size of the protests on Thursday will be closely watched. Mr. Macron is hoping to ride out them out until they fizzle so that the pension changes can be implemented by the end of the year, while the united front of labor unions that has spearheaded the marches wants to sustain pressure from the street and with strikes.
“It was a social crisis, and we have moved to a political crisis — one might even say a crisis of the regime, because the president is increasingly isolated,” said Karel Yon, a sociologist and expert on French unions and social movements at the University of Paris Nanterre.“It was a social crisis, and we have moved to a political crisis — one might even say a crisis of the regime, because the president is increasingly isolated,” said Karel Yon, a sociologist and expert on French unions and social movements at the University of Paris Nanterre.
Mr. Macron’s decision to push the bill through without the vote has kept the labor movement united and fueled the anger that has energized the protests, Mr. Yon said. He noted that local blockages of factories or roads, nighttime youth demonstrations, and other sporadic and sometimes more radical actions were now emerging “outside of the traditional union framework,” without undermining it so far. Mr. Macron’s decision to push the bill through Parliament has kept the labor movement united and fueled the anger that has energized the protests, Mr. Yon said. He noted that blockages of factories or roads, nighttime youth demonstrations, and other sporadic and sometimes more radical actions were now emerging “outside of the traditional union framework,” without undermining it so far.
“It’s a continuum,” Mr. Yon said. Many subway lines in the Paris metro were running at half capacity or less on Thursday, and protesters blocked road access to a terminal at the Roissy-Charles de Gaulle Airport, northeast of the capital. Students also blocked or demonstrated in front of dozens of high schools and universities.
National train traffic was heavily disrupted on Thursday, and many subway lines in the Paris metro were running at half capacity or less. Protesters also blocked road access to a terminal at the Roissy-Charles de Gaulle Airport, and students blocked or demonstrated in front of dozens of high schools and universities. About one in five teachers had walked out, according to the Education Ministry. Many oil refineries and fuel depots around the country were still blocked or shut down, with growing fears that gas stations could run dry despite efforts by authorities to commandeer workers in certain areas. Electricity workers said that they had briefly cut power from symbolic locations like the presidency’s official summer residence in southern France.
Many oil refineries and fuel depots around the country were still blocked or shut down, with growing fears that gas stations could run dry despite efforts by authorities to commandeer workers in certain areas. In a television interview on Wednesday, Mr. Macron said his only regret was his inability to convince a skeptical France that the age increase was urgently necessary to stave off future deficits in the pension system an urgency that his opponents firmly dispute.
In a television interview on Wednesday, the French president said his only regret was his inability to convince a skeptical France that the age increase was urgently necessary to stave off future deficits in the pension system — an urgency and a strategy that his opponents firmly dispute.
“There aren’t 36 solutions,” Mr. Macron said. “This reform is necessary.”“There aren’t 36 solutions,” Mr. Macron said. “This reform is necessary.”
But Mr. Macron remained unapologetic about using a constitutional tool to force the pension bill through National Assembly, the lower house of Parliament without a vote last week, triggering a no-confidence vote that his government barely survived and escalating the unrest that has rattled France over the past weeks. Labor unions organized several mass marches around the country in the months before Mr. Macron rammed through the pension changes, and smaller, scattered and spontaneous protests broke out in cities around the country afterward. Many were peaceful, but others were marred by burned trash, vandalized property and clashes with riot police.
“How far is he prepared to go in his blindness?” the Confédération Générale du Travail, or C.G.T., France’s second-largest union, said in a statement before the protests on Thursday. “This is no longer contempt, it is madness! While the social and political crisis is taking hold, what is the head of state playing at? What is he looking for?” On Wednesday Mr. Macron warned that he would not tolerate any “excesses.”
Labor unions organized several mass marches around the country in the months before Mr. Macron rammed through the pension changes, and smaller, scattered and spontaneous protests broke out in cities around the country afterward. Many were peaceful marches or temporary road blocks. But others were marred by burned trash, vandalized property and clashes with riot police. About 12,000 police officers were deployed across France on Thursday to secure the protests, including 5,000 in Paris. At midday, French television showed protesters in Rennes and Nantes clashing with riot police, who responded with tear gas and water cannons.
On Wednesday Mr. Macron warned that he would not tolerate any “excesses” in comparing violent protesters to the mob that assaulted the United States Congress in 2021. About 12,000 police officers were deployed across France on Thursday to secure the protests, including 5,000 in Paris. The government’s response to the protests has also fueled accusations of police brutality, large-scale corralling of demonstrators, and unwarranted preventive arrests recriminations that were familiar during the Yellow Vest protests that rocked France for weeks during Mr. Macron’s first term.
The response to the protests has also fueled accusations of police brutality, large-scale and unnecessary corralling of demonstrators, and unwarranted preventive arrests recriminations that were familiar during the Yellow Vest protests that rocked France for weeks during Mr. Macron’s first term. Claire Hédon, France’s defender of rights an official ombudsman who citizens can petition if they believe their rights have been violated warned in a statement this week that she was “worried” by videos circulating on social media and by reports of police misconduct, and would “remain vigilant.”
Claire Hédon, France’s defender of rights an official ombudsman whom citizens can petition if they believe their rights have been violated warned in a statement this week that she was “worried” by videos circulating on social media and by press reports of police misconduct, and would “remain vigilant.” Mr. Yon, the sociologist, said that the more radical demonstrations that had emerged over the past week were reminiscent of the Yellow Vest protests — a spontaneous movement that emerged outside of a union or political framework because of anger over a fuel tax but that morphed into much broader and sometimes violent anger.
Mr. Yon, the sociologist, said that the more radical protests that had emerged over the past week were reminiscent of the Yellow Vest protests a spontaneous movement that emerged outside of a union or political framework because of anger over a fuel tax but that morphed into much broader demonstrations of anger against Mr. Macron’s top-down governing style. Mr. Macron’s refusal to change course despite the unpopularity of the pension overhaul has “reactivated the feeling of a disconnect with the state and its institutions” that was prevalent during the Yellow Vest crisis, Mr. Yon said.
Mr. Macron’s inflexibility and refusal to change course despite the unpopularity of the pension overhaul has “reactivated the feeling of a disconnect with the state and its institutions” that was prevalent during the Yellow Vest crisis, Mr. Yon said.
And, he added, “the Yellow Vests were the only social movement of the past years that made the government back down.”And, he added, “the Yellow Vests were the only social movement of the past years that made the government back down.”
While the pension bill has now become law, it will be reviewed by the Constitutional Council, which examines legislation to ensure it complies with the French Constitution. A ruling is expected within the next month. While labor unions have kept a united front, the prospect of more radical actions holds the potential to divide them. “We have to keep public opinion with us until the end,” Laurent Berger, the head of the C.F.D.T., or French Democratic Confederation of Labor, told reporters at the protest in Paris. “We need nonviolent actions that don’t disrupt citizens’ daily lives.”
Mr. Macron’s party, Renaissance, and its centrist allies have only a slim majority in Parliament, and the dispute over pensions has added to doubts about his ability to get bills passed and his policies enacted. Opponents of Mr. Macron have also filed legal challenges against his pension overhaul. While the changes have now become law, they will be reviewed by the Constitutional Council, which examines legislation to ensure it complies with the Constitution. A ruling is expected within the next month.
The government has already been forced to postpone an immigration bill that was supposed to come up for debate in the Senate, France’s upper house, next week, because it was increasingly unclear whether a majority of lawmakers would back the bill. Even if the law stands, Mr. Macron’s party, Renaissance, and its centrist allies have only a slim majority in Parliament, and the dispute over pensions has added to doubts about his ability to get his policies enacted.
But Mr. Macron’s allies say they are confident that the political turbulence is temporary. The government has already been forced to postpone an immigration bill that was supposed to come up for debate in the Senate, France’s upper house, next week, because it was unclear whether a majority of lawmakers would back it.
Sacha Houlié, a lawmaker from Mr. Macron’s party who chairs the National Assembly’s powerful law committee, acknowledged that the government had failed to convince people about the merits of the pension law and was hoping to defuse the crisis by shifting focus to less divisive issues, like enshrining the right to abortion in the French Constitution or improving end-of-life care. But Mr. Macron’s allies say they are confident that the turbulence is temporary.
But Mr. Houlié also noted that the government had managed to get other laws through the lower house despite its weak majority, pointing to a new nuclear investment plan that was adopted with a large majority on Tuesday, just a day after the government narrowly survived the no-confidence vote. Sacha Houlié, a Renaissance lawmaker who chairs the National Assembly’s law committee, acknowledged that the government had failed to convince people about the merits of the pension law and was hoping to defuse the crisis by shifting to less divisive issues, like enshrining the right to abortion in the Constitution or improving end-of-life care.
Mr. Macron said on Wednesday he wanted his prime minister to try and seek out lawmakers from other parties willing to work with his majority on certain bills which opponents have rejected as unrealistic. But Mr. Houlié also noted that the government had gotten other laws through the lower house despite its weak majority, like a new nuclear investment plan that was adopted with a large majority this week, one day after the cabinet narrowly survived the no-confidence vote.
“There are political difficulties that are significant, there is a social crisis which is important," Mr. Houlié said. “But the idea that we’re now blocked is false.”
Mr. Macron now wants his prime minister to seek out lawmakers from other parties willing to work with his majority on certain bills, but opponents did not seem eager to cooperate.
“Emmanuel Macron has brought the country into a political and social dead end,” Olivier Faure, the head of the Socialist Party, told the newspaper Libération on Thursday. “Who wants to govern with him?”“Emmanuel Macron has brought the country into a political and social dead end,” Olivier Faure, the head of the Socialist Party, told the newspaper Libération on Thursday. “Who wants to govern with him?”
Constant Méheut and Catherine Porter contributed reporting.Constant Méheut and Catherine Porter contributed reporting.