French demonstrators yesterday faced another day of protests and strikes to denounce French President Emmanuel Macron’s pension reform, after the latest talks between the government and unions ended in deadlock.
There have been signs that the two-and-a-half-month protest movement is starting to lose some momentum, and unions were hoping for a mass turnout on the 11th day of action since January.
All sides in the standoff are awaiting a verdict on Friday next week on the validity of the reform by France’s Constitutional Council, which has the power to strike out some or even all of the legislation.
Photo: AFP
Macron, currently on a visit to China, is facing the biggest challenge of his second term over his flagship pension overhaul, which includes hiking the minimum retirement age from 62 to 64.
“We’re still asking for the reform to be revoked,” Laurent Berger, head of the centrist CFDT union, told RTL radio yesterday morning.
“We’re following the democratic process, which is to protest this pension bill,” he said.
Protests descended into violent unrest after French Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne on March 16 invoked a controversial executive power to ram the bill through parliament without a vote.
Police were expecting 600,000 to 800,000 people to protest nationwide yesterday.
Unions said a meeting with Borne on Wednesday made no progress after she refused to discuss going back on the minimum retirement age of 64.
“It’s clearly a failure when the prime minister won’t even allow a way into that discussion,” Cyril Chabanier said, speaking on behalf of the nation’s eight main unions after they walked out barely an hour into the talks.
It was the first such gathering between the two sides since the government presented the contentious pensions bill in January.
Despite refusing to budge on the issue, Borne said she would not move forward with any other labor topics “without social partners.”
Berger on Wednesday said that France was experiencing “a grave democratic crisis.”
Macron is to remain for the rest of the week in China, where an aide denied this allegation given that the pension change was in the president’s manifesto during his re-election campaign last year.
“You can’t speak of a democratic crisis when the bill has been enacted, explained to the public and the government is taking responsibility for it,” said the aide, asking not to be identified by name.
Union heads had called for a record turnout in yesterday’s protest, but numbers in the previous round of strikes and protests on Tuesday last week were down on the week earlier.
A record number of people, more than 1.2 million, marched against the reform nationwide on March 7.
The Paris metro system was for the first time on a strike day, but was expected to work with minimal disruption, operator RATP said.
Across the country, three high-speed trains out of four were running, railway operator SNCF said.
Just 20 percent of schoolteachers were yesterday expected to strike, the Snuipp-FSU union said.
The government has said that the changes are necessary to prevent the pensions system from plunging into deficit.
In the rest of Europe, people mostly retire in their late 60s as life expectancy has increased.
Critics say the pensions reform is unfair for people in tough jobs who start working early, as well as women who interrupt their careers to raise children.
If the Constitutional Council approves it, Macron would be able to sign the changes into law.
However, the standoff has eroded his popularity, with a poll on Wednesday suggesting that far-right leader Marine Le Pen would beat him if the presidential election of last year were repeated now.
The survey from the Elabe group for BFM television indicated Le Pen would score 55 percent and Macron 45 percent if they faced each other in a run-off vote.
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