Strikes spread as French unions intensify pension reform fight
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[March 07, 2023] By
Dominique Vidalon and Forrest Crellin
PARIS (Reuters) -French truck drivers and garbage collectors joined
nationwide strikes against President Emmanuel Macron's pension reform
plans on Tuesday as trade unions stepped up their campaign to force a
policy U-turn.
On the sixth day of industrial action since mid-January, there was also
widespread disruption to commuter and high-speed train services, fuel
deliveries were halted and numerous schools shut.
This is a critical time for the government, which is hoping the reform
will be adopted by parliament later this month.
Looking to pile pressure on lawmakers not to raise the pension age by
two years to 64, France's more hardline unions said there would be
rolling strikes this time, which could go on for days, including at oil
refineries and on the railways.
"We will continue until the reform is withdrawn," the head of Force
Ouvriere union, Frédéric Souillot, told RTL radio.
Macron's proposal to make people work longer is deeply unpopular amongst
the wider public, opinion polls show. Street protests are expected to
take place in more than 300 towns and cities.
There were reports of students blocking schools while BFM TV showed
footage of workers abandoning cars on the side of the road near Amiens
in northern France as others blocked access to an industrial zone.
"This reform is unfair," said Aurelie Herkous, who works in public
finance in the Normandy town of Pont Audemer. "Macron offers tax gifts
to companies ... he's got to stop coming down on the same people time
after time."
ROLLING STRIKES?
France's leading trade unions have so far acted with rare unity, but the
coming days and weeks will be a test of their ability to maintain that
united front.
The CFDT, now France's biggest trade union and generally reform-minded,
has not committed to the rolling strikes sought by the hardleft CGT,
Force Ouvriere (FO) and others.
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Empty platforms at the Saint-Lazare
train station during a nationwide day of strike and protests against
the French government's pension reform plan, with heavy disruption
on French SNCF railway and the Paris transport RATP networks, in
Paris, France, March 7, 2023. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier
"The CFDT will propose other types of social mobilisation," Laurent
Berger, head of the CFDT, said in a radio interview on Monday.
While the government will be looking for divisions to emerge between
the unions in the hope it weakens the movement, the CGT and FO,
which are powerful within the transport and energy sectors, would
still be able to bring significant disruption even without the CFDT
participation.
The government insists its reform plan is essential to ensure the
pension system does not go bust.
"I can understand that not many people want to work two more years,
but it's necessary to ensure the viability of the system," Prime
Minister Elisabeth Borne told France 5 TV.
While Macron's camp does not have an absolute majority in
parliament, it can count on the support of at least part of the
conservative Les Republicains party.
"I'm telling Emmanuel Macron to hang in there," LR senator Bruno
Retailleau said. "If he gives in, he won't be able to carry out more
reforms, it would be the end of his (second) term."
Even so, the legislation is having a bumpy path through parliament
and Macron and his government may yet be forced to use special
constitutional powers to bypass a parliamentary vote.
"We are going into a higher gear," the head of CGT union, Philippe
Martinez, told weekly JDD. "The ball is now in president (Macron)'s
court. It is up to him to withdraw this reform."
(Reporting by Forrest Crellin, Benjamin Mallet, Ingrid Melander,
Elizabeth Pineau, Benoit van Overstraeten, Blandine Henault,
Dominique Vidalon, Marc Leras, Yonathan Van der Voort, Writing by
Ingrid MelanderEditing by Tomasz Janowski, Kirsten Donovan and
Christina Fincher)
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