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NY Post
New York Post
1 May 2023


NextImg:French police battle black-clad anarchists during May day rallies

French police clashed with black-clad anarchists in Paris and other big cities during trade union-organized protests against President Emmanuel Macron’s increase in the retirement age, as workers joined Labor Day rallies across Europe.

In the French capital, police were pelted with projectiles, ride-sharing bicycles were torched and bus stops smashed up just as the union-led march got underway from the central Place de la Republique.

Unrest also erupted in Lyon, where several vehicles were set ablaze and some business premises were trashed, television images showed.

In Nantes in western France, a fire blazed in front of a local administration building.

Macron last month raised the retirement age by two years to 64 despite multi-sector strikes, in a move that drove his popularity down to near the record lows seen during the “Yellow Vest” crisis of 2018-2019.

The reform has crystallized discontent against a president perceived by many as aloof and indifferent to their daily hardships, and he has been met during walkabouts by heckling and pot banging.

“The executive cannot govern without the support of its people,” Sophie Binet, leader of the hard-left CGT union, said ahead of the Paris protest, adding her union had not yet decided on talks with the government on other work-related matters.

French CRS riot police walk during the traditional May Day labour march.
REUTERS

A demonstrator falls down as he clashes with police officers.

A demonstrator falls down as he clashes with police officers.
REUTERS

Laurent Berger, head of the reform-minded CFDT trade union, said Macron’s government had been deaf to the demands of one of the most powerful social movements in decades.

He dismissed suggestions that a rare alliance between the leading trade unions was being tested now that the pension bill had been signed into law.

“We must bring other proposals over salaries and working conditions to the table,” he told BFM TV.

Demonstrators walk near a burning car.

Demonstrators walk near a burning car in Nantes.
REUTERS

A car burns as demonstrators clash with police.

A car burns as demonstrators clash with police.
REUTERS

In Paris, Extinction Rebellion activists threw paint over the glass-fronted facade of the Louis Vuitton Foundation and paving stones outside the Ritz Hotel.

Elsewhere in Europe, union-led protests were planned across Germany.

In Italy, the three main unions held a rally in the southern city of Potenza protesting against a labor package approved by Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s rightist government.

Protesters mobilize against the French pension reform law and for social justice.

Protesters mobilize against the French pension reform law and for social justice.
REUTERS

In the northern city of Turin, anti-government protesters marched with a puppet of Meloni holding up her arm in a fascist salute.

During a parade in the Swiss city of Zurich, demonstrators threw water balloons at the emergency services, the windows of at least two banks were smashed and some properties were spray-painted, police said.

Macron says the French reform is needed to help shore up one of the industrialized world’s most generous pension systems.

Demonstrators cover themselves with umbrellas.

Demonstrators cover themselves with umbrellas as police throw gas canisters.
REUTERS

A demonstrator holds an umbrella.

A demonstrator holds an umbrella as tear gas plumes surround them.
REUTERS

French pension payments as a share of pre-retirement earnings are comfortably higher than elsewhere and a French man typically spends longer in retirement than those in other OECD nations.

Trade unions say the money can be found elsewhere.

Retired metalworker Michel Maingy said he felt the battle over pensions was lost.

A demonstrator fires fireworks towards the police during the traditional May Day labour march.

A demonstrator shoots fireworks toward the police during the traditional May Day labour march.
REUTERS

A demonstrator throws tear gas during the May Day protest in Nantes.

A demonstrator throws tear gas during the May Day protest in Nantes.
REUTERS

Even so, there were still fights to be won in negotiations over working conditions, he said.

“Little by little, we’ll get back on track. We need to keep our chins up,” he said ahead of the protest in Nantes.

Macron’s government, which lacks a working majority in parliament, rammed the pension legislation through without a final vote due to a lack of cross-party support.

A hardening of the political opposition risks complicating the rest of his reform agenda, including an employment bill that would require those receiving the minimum welfare benefit to work or get training for 15-20 hours per week.

Fitch cut France’s sovereign credit rating on Friday by one notch to ‘AA-‘, saying that the social unrest and potential political deadlock posed risks to Macron’s agenda.