French workers went on strike and joined marches across the country on Thursday, halting trains and cutting electricity production in a nationwide day of protest against government plans to raise the retirement age by two years to 64.
Key points:
- President Emmanuel Macron has proposed raising France’s retirement age by two years to 64, a move he says is necessary to save the pension system
- The move is highly unpopular, and unions hope to galvanise nationwide opposition into ongoing strikes and protests
- Trains were halted, energy production was lowered and school teachers walked off the job on Thursday
The stoppages are a major test for President Emmanuel Macron, who says his pension reform plan, which opinion polls show is hugely unpopular, is vital to ensure the system does not go bust.
Pushing back the retirement age by two years and extending the pay-in period would bring in a net total of 17.7 billion euros ($27.8 billion) in annual pension contributions, allowing the system to break even by 2027, according to Labour Ministry estimates.
“This reform is necessary and fair,” Labour Minister Olivier Dussopt told LCI TV.
But the protesters disagreed.
“It’s salaries and pensions that must be increased, not the retirement age,” read one large banner carried by workers that opened the protest march in Tours, in western France.
“I’ll have to prepare my walking frame if the reform goes through,” said Isabelle, 53, a social worker, saying her job was too tough to add two more years.
Brigitte Meny, an early retiree, said she was protesting to show solidarity with former colleagues.
“Sixty-four, it’s too old,” she said. “And I’m also here because I’m fed up with Macron.”
In Nice, in southern France, a large banner read: “No to the reform.”
Unions argue there are other ways to ensure the viability of the pension system, such as taxing the super-rich or increasing employers’ contributions or those of well-off pensioners.
The challenge for them is to transform opposition to the reform — and anger over a cost-of-living crisis — into a mass social protest which could eventually force the government to change tack.
Union leaders, expected to announce more strikes and protests in the evening, said Thursday was just the beginning.
“We need a lot of people to join the protests,” Laurent Berger, head of France’s largest union, the CFDT, told BFM TV.
“People are against this reform … we need to show it (in the streets).”
Musical interlude as civil servants strike
The pension reform still needs to go through parliament, where Mr Macron has lost his absolute majority but is hoping to get it passed with the support of conservatives.
Train drivers, teachers and refinery workers were among those who walked off their jobs.
France Inter radio ran its music playlist instead of its usual programming, and bus drivers and civil servants also went on strike.
Only between one-in-three and one-in-five high-speed TGV train lines were operating, with barely any local or regional trains running, the national rail operator said.
In Paris, some metro stations were closed and traffic was seriously disrupted, with few trains running.
In the busy Gare du Nord station, people rushed to catch the few trains still operating while employees in yellow vests were assisting frazzled commuters.
Restaurant worker Beverly Gahinet, who missed work because her train was cancelled, said she agreed with the strike even if she was not taking part.
But not all were so understanding.
“I don’t understand, it’s always the same [people] who are on strike … and we have to endure it,” said real estate worker Virginie Pinto, as she struggled to find a metro to go to work.
A 2007 ban on unauthorised walkouts and restrictions on strikes to guarantee minimum public services have limited unions’ ability to wear down governments’ reform ambitions.
The fact that working from home is much more common now since the pandemic could also have an impact.
Tax the rich?
Public sector workers are often at the forefront of strikes, and some seven out of 10 primary school teachers stopped work, and nearly as many in high schools, their unions said, though the Education Ministry gave much lower figures.
In Paris, students blockaded at least one high school in support of the strike action.
Data from electricity company EDF and grid operator RTE showed electricity production was down by roughly 12 per cent of total power supply, prompting France to raise imports.
Shipments were also blocked at energy producer TotalEnergies’ refineries.
The company’s chief executive said on Wednesday that one day of strikes would not disrupt refinery operations, but this could change if protests continued.
The impact on air traffic was largely limited to a reduction of about 20 per cent of flights in Orly, Paris’s second-biggest airport.
Air France said it was operating all its long-haul flights and 90 per cent of its short and medium-haul flights.
Mr Macron and several of his ministers, meanwhile, were in Barcelona on Thursday for a meeting with Spanish officials.
Reuters