Strikes against French president Macron’s pension reform plans shut schools and caused transport chaos around the country, though the number of people taking part seemed to have dropped off from last week
PARIS - Strikes against pension reforms shut schools and caused transport chaos around France on Tuesday, but the number of people taking to the streets appeared to have dropped off from last week in a positive sign for President Emmanuel Macron.
Protesters hold banners during a demonstration against French government's pensions reform plans in Marseille as part of a second day of national strike and protests in France, December 10, 2019. The slogan reads"work, shop and shut up". REUTERS/Jean-Paul Pelissier Public workers have been on strike for six days, with trains the hardest hit. Unions had called for mass protests on Tuesday, the day before Macron’s government is to unveil details of its plan to simplify a complicated pension system that offers some of the worlds most generous benefits. Organizers had wanted to match the 800,000 who participated in a first day of protest last Thursday, but union leaders acknowledged the crowds were smaller. Nevertheless, the unions showed no sign of backing down in a battle of political will in the run-up to Christmas that could make or break Macron’s presidency. “Given the depth of discontent, there is a need to get more people on the streets,” Philippe Martinez, head of the hard-left CGT, told reporters before leading a protest march in Paris. Behind Martinez, protesters chanted “Macron we’re coming to get you” and waved banners reading “strike or die of hunger”. Macron is determined to simplify a system of more than 40 separate pension plans. He says a single, points-based system would be fairer, giving every pensioner the same rights for each euro contributed. The unions say Macron wants to strip workers of hard-earned benefits and threatens their quality of life.See more stories “What’s at stake goes much beyond simply overhauling the pension system,” said Christopher Dembik, an economist with Saxo Bank in Paris. “For Emmanuel Macron, it’s about ... reasserting his ability to reform the country.”The strikes follow months of negotiations. On Wednesday, Prime Minister Edouard Philippe will outline the reform’s key elements. He told ruling party lawmakers on Tuesday that he did not expect a sudden end to the unions’ revolt. “There are no magical announcements that can end all the questioning. There will always be questions. And there will be again after those tomorrow,” one lawmaker cited the prime minister as saying. Failure to reform would mean a deficit in the pensions system of up to 17 billion euros , 0.7% of GDP, by 2025, an independent pension committee forecast. Macron is aware of the public opposition to simply raising the retirement age of 62. One alternative is to curb benefits for those who stop working before 64 and give a boost to those who leave later.The strike is among the biggest since 1995 when prime minister Alain Juppe was forced to abandon an overhaul of the pension system after weeks of industrial action. Juppe’s cabinet never recovered from that defeat.Among Tuesday’s protesters in Paris, Yann Cardin said the lower turnout reflected a desire to prepare for a long fight. “Each day that we strike is a day’s salary lost. Today we’re hunkering down for the long haul,” the 34-year-old dancer said. “We need to manage our forces.”
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