
Above Photo: Protesters hold a banner that reads âRetirement is at 60â at a pension reform demonstration in Nice, France, September 29, 2022.
Massive general strike mobilization at the Place de la RĂ©publique in Paris to save French workersâ pensionspic.twitter.com/ppIf1FjoVG
â Eric Blanc (@_ericblanc) January 19, 2023
Massive mayhem is ahead in France, as unions and protesters call for a âBlack Thursdayâ countrywide strike over the governmentâs pension plans this week.
The day of protest will be the first significant challenge that will establish the extent of the publicâs will to pressure French President Emmanuel Macron to back down on plans to increase the official retirement age. To this end, French union leaders have urged for âmassive mobilization.â
Three-quarters of teachers are anticipated to join the strike, disrupting schools, transportation, and healthcare services. Most trains will not operate, the Paris metro services will be significantly impacted, and flights are expected to be canceled. Truck drivers, couriers, petroleum refinery workers, and delivery businesses have all announced they will be joining the strikes.
For the first time in 12 years, unions have overcome their often adversarial relationships and found a common cause as union leaders declared that Thursday will be the âfirst day of mobilizationâ demanding the âunfair and unnecessaryâ pension plans be dropped.
<iframe width=â1030âł height=â579âł src=âhttps://www.youtube.com/embed/HAjucmUPeeEâ title=âYellow Vests protest in Parisâ frameborder=â0âł allow=âaccelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture; web-shareâ allowfullscreen></iframe>
1 in 2 French people want ânew protest movementâ: Survey
As the specifics of the French governmentâs contentious new pension reform proposal emerge, a poll indicated that 52% of those polled want to see France face a âsocial explosionâ in the coming months, with the formation of a âYellow Vests-type movement.â
This is the finding of a study conducted by the French polling institute Ifop, which also discovered that 79% of respondents believe that the scenario of an impending âsocial explosion,â including a new protest movement, is plausible.
It is worth noting that the results are considered the second-highest figures ever recorded by the polling institute since it was created in 1998.
Only in November 2020 did the figure rise above 85%. It was due to the governmentâs harsh coronavirus restrictions, including a second lockdown, at the time.
48% of French people are âoutragedâ over the countryâs economic and social situation, as per the latest survey.
Only 32% stated they are âresignedâ to the situation, while only 18% are âconfident.â
In a similar context, Philippe Martinez, head of the General Confederation of Labour (CGT), Franceâs leading trade union, has lately warned that France will see a wave of mass strikes in early 2023 if the government does not roll back its pension reform.
Source: Popularresistance.org