French pension reform plan triggers new strikes, protests
New nationwide strikes disrupted public transport and schools, as well as power, oil and gas supplies in France, while tens of thousands of demonstrators marched Tuesday in a third round of protests against planned pension reforms.
The protests came a day after French lawmakers began debating a pension bill that would raise the minimum retirement from 62 to 64. The bill is the flagship legislation of President Emmanuel Macron's second term.
Tens of thousands marched in the cities of Nice, Marseille, Toulouse, Nantes and elsewhere, as well as in Paris. Protesters in the French capital, many of whom were young, marched from the Opera area across the city carrying placards reading "Save Your Pension" and "Tax Billionaires, Not Grandmas."
France's current pension system "is a democratic achievement in the sense that it is a French specialty that other countries envy," said one protester, media worker Anissa Saudemont, 29.
"I feel that with high inflation, unemployment, the war in Ukraine and climate change, the government should focus on something else," she added.
AP journalists covering the protest in Paris observed smaller crowds than in the previous two days of action. Much of the Paris march was peaceful, but there were flashes of unrest; police said officers detained 10 people for "throwing projectiles" and alleged vandalism.
Yet the nationwide disruption Tuesday, including in schools, was expected to be lower overall than before.
French Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne defended the government plan Tuesday but suggested there was room to make adjustments.
"I'm convinced there are points of agreement to be found. I'm convinced that we can improve this text together. It will be through debate, confronting ideas and, of course, respect," she said, noting graffiti that appeared on the meeting place of the National Assembly, including a door marked with "60."
If nothing is done, Borne said, taxes and social charges will increase, along with unemployment and lower purchasing power. That would would cost retirees with modest pensions and "all those who worked all their lives, and certainly not the big bosses," she said.
"Voila, your alternative project," Borne said.
Last week, an estimated 1.27 million people demonstrated, according to authorities, more than in the first big protest day on Jan. 19. More demonstrations, called by France's eight main unions, were planned for Saturday.
Rail operator SNCF said train services were severely disrupted Tuesday across the country, including on its high-speed network. International lines to Britain and Switzerland were affected. The Paris metro was also disrupted.
Saad Kadiui, 37, a consulting cabinet chief who had to go through a disrupted Paris train station Tuesday, said he did not support the "wearisome" strikes. "There are other ways to protest the pension reform," he said.
Kadiui said he supported the principle of the pension reform but wanted the bill to be improved in parliament. "I think that for some jobs, 64 is too late," he said.
Power producer EDF said the protest movement led to temporarily reduced electricity supplies, without causing blackouts. More than half of the workforce was on strike at the TotalEnergies refineries, according to the company.
The Education Ministry said close to 13% of teachers were on strike, a decrease compared to last week's protest day. A third of French regions were on scheduled school breaks.
Macron vowed to go ahead with the changes, despite opinion polls showing growing opposition. The bill would gradually increase the minimum retirement age to 64 by 2030 and accelerate a planned measure providing that people must have worked for at least 43 years to be entitled to a full pension.
The government argues the changes are designed to keep the pension system financially afloat. France's aging population is expected to plunge the system into deficit in the coming decade.
The parliamentary debates at the National Assembly and the Senate are expected to last several weeks.
Opposition lawmakers have proposed more than 20,000 amendments to the bill debated on Monday, mostly by the left-wing Nupes coalition.
Philippe Martinez, secretary general of the powerful CGT union, called on the government and lawmakers to "listen to the people." Speaking on French radio network RTL, he denounced Macron's attitude as "playing with fire."
Macron wants to show that "he is able to pass a reform, no matter what public opinion says, what the citizens think," Martinez asserted.
The head of the CFDT union, Laurent Berger, also called on the government to "listen" to the crowd that took to the streets. "One can only respond to social tension through the democratic exercise of power," he told French newspaper La Croix.
Rancor over the pension plan went beyond parliament's raucous debate. The speaker of the lower house, the National Assembly, reported that the bill had triggered anonymous voicemails, graffiti and a threatening letter to the head of the chamber's Social Affairs Committee.
"That's enough," Yael Braun-Pivet tweeted. "These acts are an attack on our democratic life. ... We won't tolerate it."
Several lawmakers from the far-right National Rally party received voicemails during Monday's debate saying that loved ones were hospitalized, in an apparent ploy to make them leave the assembly. The group's leader, Marine Le Pen, said she was filing a legal complaint.
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AP Writer Sylvie Corbet and Elaine Ganley in Paris contributed
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