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After pan-bashing, France's Macron faces Labour Day protests

AFP/The Local
AFP/The Local - [email protected]
After pan-bashing, France's Macron faces Labour Day protests
Vehicles belonging to France's energy distributor Enedis gather – one adorned with graffiti which reads as 'Macron, screw your reform' – on April 27, 2023, ahead of forming a convoy to protest France's divisive pension reforms. President Emmanuel Macron faces more nationwide protests on Monday. Photo: AFP

France's President Emmanuel Macron faces more nationwide protests on Monday as he seeks to steer the country on from a divisive pension law that has sparked anger, pan-bashing and social unrest.

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Last month he signed a law to raise the retirement age from 62 to 64, despite months of strikes against the bill.

He and his government have since tried to turn the page on the episode of popular discontent, one of the biggest challenges to his second mandate.

But protesters have booed and banged pots and pans at him on his forays into provincial France to meet members of the public.

READ ALSO: Macron booed by angry French protesters as he begins appeasement tour

When Macron attended a football match on Saturday, he was met with activists waving red cards.

Unions and the opposition are hoping for a mass turnout at the May Day rallies to let Macron know they continue to oppose the pension overhaul.

"I invite all French men and women... to go out and catch the sun, to tan while pushing their baby strollers in the streets of Paris and the rest of the country," Francois Ruffin, a member of parliament for the hard-left France Unbowed party, said on Sunday.

"We are making sure 2023 goes down in the country's social history," he told broadcaster BFMTV ahead of the public holiday.

Monday will mark the first time since 2009 that all eight of France's main unions have joined in calling for protests.

"This worker's holiday will take place amid union unity and that alone is historic," said Frederic Souillot, the secretary general of the Force Ouvriere (Worker's Force) union.

READ ALSO: OPINION: Drunk on their own rhetoric, certain French unions resort to guerrilla actions in pensions battle

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'Red card' for Macron

Almost three in four French people were unhappy with Macron, a survey by the IFOP polling group found last month.

France has been rocked by a dozen days of nationwide strikes and protests against Macron and his pension changes since mid-January, some of which have turned violent.

But momentum has waned at recent strikes and demonstrations held during the working week, as workers appear unwilling to continue to sacrifice pay.

Protests in recent weeks have taken on a more humorous tone.

READ ALSO: Demos and flowers – what to expect in France on May 1st 2023

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Demonstrators clanged kitchenware to drown out Macron during a speech to the nation after approving the pension law last month, and activists have kept up the practice on some of his visits around the country.

Near the Stade de France stadium outside Paris on Saturday, union activists distributed red cards and whistles to football fans coming to watch the final of the French Cup.

"Red card for retirement at 64," they read, ahead of the game in which Toulouse beat Nantes.

A spectator holds a placard reading " red card for the retirement at 64 "  during the French Cup final football match between Nantes (FC) and Toulouse (FC)

A spectator holds a placard reading "red card for retirement at 64" during the final of the French Cup between Nantes (FC) and Toulouse (FC) at the Stade de France on the outskirts of Paris, on April 29, 2023. (Photo by FRANCK FIFE / AFP)

But security staff confiscated most whistles as supporters entered the stadium, and not a lot of protest was heard at the planned action time of 49 minutes and 30 seconds into the match.

That timing was a reference to the controversial article 49.3 of the constitution, which prime minister Elisabeth Borne invoked in March to ram the pension reform through parliament without a vote in the hung lower house.

READ ALSO: VIDEO: Macron joins French sing-song as protesters take to the streets

'Nasty turn'

Macron won a second five-year term last year, but lost his parliamentary majority in June elections.

Borne last week pledged to cut unemployment and make industry greener as she sought to move on to other affairs of state.

She also postponed any discussion on a controversial immigration bill until the autumn for lack of a parliamentary majority, saying she believed it was not the time for another divisive debate.

Labour unions early last month walked out of talks with Borne after she refused to budge on the pension reform's headline measure of raising the retirement age.

But CFDT union leader Laurent Berger on Sunday said that did not mean an end to all talks between unions and the government, even after the reform was signed into law.

If invited, "the CFDT... will go and talk like a union in a firm does with a boss -- even shortly after that boss did them a nasty turn", he said.

 

 

 

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