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Despite fierce protests in France, Emmanuel Macron enacts his unpopular pension reform

2023-04-15T15:31:07.456Z


The president signed it at dawn, after the Constitutional Council gave the green light to increase the retirement age.


French President Emmanuel Macron signed into law his unpopular pension reform early Saturday morning, a "provocation" for unions and the opposition after

three months of a social conflict

that is set to continue.

"A law promulgated at night, like thieves," reacted the communist leader, Fabien Roussel.

"What a provocation! New bluff by Emmanuel Macron while the country has never been so fractured," environmentalist Marine Tondelier tweeted.

Macron's office announced that

the head of state will address the country in a speech on Monday evening

, to make, according to government spokesman Olivier Véran, an "assessment" of the three months of crisis, "in a logic of appeasement".

The French Constitutional Council validated on Friday afternoon the delay of the retirement age from 62 to 64 years by 2030 and the advancement to 2027 of the requirement to contribute 43 years, and not 42, to receive a full pension.

Protests on Friday against pension reform in France ended with serious incidents in Rennes and other cities.

Photo: AFP

Although this represents a "legal victory" for the 45-year-old liberal president, the press unanimously estimated this Saturday that it is a "pyrrhic victory" and "a disaster for the nation", even more so when a large majority of The French opposed it, as was seen on the streets of many cities in a string of protest rallies.

The unions had warned that France is experiencing a "democratic crisis" after the president decided in mid-March to adopt his unpopular law by decree, fearing he would lose the vote in Parliament where he lacks an absolute majority.

That decision had radicalized the protests and, with its rapid promulgation, Macron "seems to enjoy adding fuel to the fire," estimated the leader of the UNSA union, Laurent Escure, for whom "nothing good will come of this."

Emmanuel Macron visited Notre Dame Cathedral restoration works on Friday, amid protests in Paris.

Photo: EFE

On Friday, after the Constitutional ruling,

incidents were recorded in several cities such as Paris

, where there were 138 detainees.

In Rennes (west) the door of a police station was set on fire, and in Marseille (southeast), the train station was invaded.

union challenge


The trade union centrals, the spearhead of the protest since January, have already

called for an "exceptional mobilization" on May 1

, on the occasion of International Workers' Day, to protest against the reform.

The four representative unions of the national railway company SNCF announced "a day of expression of anger" on Thursday.

And the CGT union also announced

new strike days and protests

in all sectors on Thursday and April 28.

The mobilization in Paris also ended with serious damage on Friday.

Photo: AP

The government's objective is to turn the page quickly with new measures in areas such as health or education, in full concern of the French for their purchasing power.

However, the latent social conflict is a brake if it is not resolved, and on the other hand the unions refuse to meet with the government and Macron before May 1.

Referendum on the reform?


On May 3, the Constitutional Court must rule on a request from the left-wing opposition to organize

a referendum

on limiting the retirement age to 62 years, after rejecting a similar first request on Friday.

Beyond the reform, which he defended to avoid a deficit of 13,000 million euros (14,400 million dollars) in the pension fund by 2030, the president also risked being able to apply his program during his second term until 2027.

Posters repudiating Emmanuel Macron in a march against the pension reform, this Thursday in Paris.

Photo: REUTERS

In April 2022, Macron was re-elected with 58.5% of the vote against the far-right Marine Le Pen.

Aware that his victory was due in part to the cordon sanitaire against his rival, he vowed to rule differently and unite the country.

But the episode of the pension reform showed the opposite.

The law was adopted using

controversial legal mechanisms

that limited the debate in Parliament and without listening to the majority rejection of the population and the unions.

The popularity of the head of state has now fallen in polls to less than 30%.

"There is an arrogance in Emmanuel Macron that feeds on social ignorance," said the historian Pierre Rosanvallon in the newspaper

Libération

, for whom "the time of revolutions" or "far-right populism" could now return.

Opinion polls show for the moment

a deterioration in the confidence of the French in the institutions

and a progression in the intention to vote for Marine Le Pen, despite the fact that her opposition to the reform was less active than that of the left.

By Toni Cerdá, AFP agency 

BC

look also

Pension reform in France: after another day of fury, cracks appear between Macron and his prime minister, and the unions march again

What's wrong with Emmanuel Macron?

Explosive speech, booing and the ghost of pension reform

Source: clarin

All news articles on 2023-04-15

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