Concerns over violence mount as France faces new nationwide pension strikes
French unions are holding a new day of nationwide strikes on Tuesday to try to force President Emmanuel Macron to reverse his decision to push through unpopular pension reforms.
As concerns grow over mounting violence, labor organizations have blamed the government for creating an explosive situation.
Protests on Thursday ended in chaos, with hardcore fringes clashing with riot police. Further scuffles have taken place in the days since.
The backlash against raising the minimum retirement age by two years to 64 has escalated since Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne said on March 16 that Article 49.3 of the constitution would be used to avoid a vote on the bill in the National Assembly.
Since then, there have been 114 acts of vandalism on the local offices of members of parliament, 128 cases of damage to public buildings and 2,179 arson attacks, while almost 900 police offic-ers have been injured, according to Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin.
“Radicalized elements from the ultra left and extreme left are trying to take union marches hostage,” Darmanin told a news conference. “They come to cause damage, to injure, and to kill the police. Their aims have nothing to do with pension reform.”
The minister said security forces consider there’s a very significant risk of breaches of public order on Tuesday and added that an unprecedented 13,000 officers are being deployed across the country, including 5,500 in the French capital.
The police have also come under scrutiny during the protests, with unions, Amnesty International and Council of Europe Commissioner of Human Rights Dunja Mijatovic warning against excessive use of force.
Darmanin said 17 internal investigations are ongoing into police behavior at the marches.
“There is a dangerous climate, which is another reason to hit pause and for the government to understand that age 64 is rejected and they need to retreat from it,” Laurent Berger, the head of the moderate CFDT union, said on France 2 television on Monday.
Backing down would raise questions over Macron’s pledge to repair public finances and spur the labor market with pro-business reforms. However, pushing ahead by enacting the law risks a prolonged conflict and further splintering parliament, where he has already lost his absolute majority and relies on opposition lawmakers to pass texts in a conventional manner.
The president has attempted to appease the situation by promising to account more for workers in future reforms, including with a measure to force companies to share more of their profits when conducting share buybacks. Borne has said she is open to talks with opposition and union leaders, and aims to avoid using Article 49.3 again for anything apart from budget bills.
Surveys regularly show French people want Macron to cancel the reform. According to an Elabe poll after he spoke on television March 22, only 24 percent consider him to be a good president and 60 percent approve of the protests. A recent Ifop poll showed he’s also losing voters to the far right.
Burning trash on the streets of Paris after refuse collectors joined the strikes has become a defining image of the conflict.
“The image of France has never been better — it’s the place where there’s been the most investment in Europe in the last years,” Geoffroy Roux de Bezieux, the chairman of business lobby Medef, said Monday on France Info radio. “But it’s fragile and if this violence lasts and the garbage isn’t collected in Paris, yes it could discourage investors.”