fbpx
Wikipedia

2023 French pension reform strikes

A series of general strikes and demonstrations began in France on 19 January 2023, organised by people opposed to the 2023 French pension reform bill proposed by the Borne government, which would increase the retirement age from 62 to 64 years old. The strikes have led to widespread disruption, including garbage piling up in the streets and public transport cancellations. In March, the government used Article 49.3 of the constitution to force the bill through the French Parliament, sparking more protests and two failed no confidence votes, contributing to an increase in violence in protests alongside the union-organised strike action.

2023 French pension reform protests
Manifestations en France contre la réforme des retraites de 2023
Part of the protests against Emmanuel Macron
The demonstration on 19 January in Paris.
Date19 January 2023 – present (2023-01-19 – present)
(65 days)
Location
Caused byPension reform of the Borne government
GoalsCancellation of the pension reform of the Borne government
Methods
StatusOngoing
Parties to the civil conflict
Lead figures
  • Decentralized leadership (various social leaders)
  • Trade union leaders:
  • Philippe Martinez
  • Frédéric Souillot [fr]
  • Laurent Berger
  • Laurent Escure [fr]
  • François Hommeril [fr]
Number
Between 368k and 1.28 million (police) and between 1 and 3.5 million (Trade Unions)[1]
Unknown

Background

The issue of pension reforms has been dealt with by various governments over recent decades, specifically to tackle budget shortfalls.[2] France has one of the lowest retirement ages for an industrialised country, and spends more than most countries on pensions, it amounting to almost 14% of economic output.[3] France's pension system is largely built on a "pay-as-you-go structure"; both workers and employers "are assessed mandatory payroll taxes that are used to fund retiree pensions". This system, "which has enabled generations to retire with a guaranteed, state-backed pension, will not change". Compared to other European countries, France possesses "one of the lowest rates of pensioners at risk of poverty", with a net pension replacement rate ("a measure of how effectively retirement income replaces prior earnings") of 74%, higher than OECD and EU averages. The New York Times says the government argues rising life expectancies "have left the system in an increasingly precarious state"; "[i]n 2000, there were 2.1 workers paying into the system for every one retiree; in 2020 that ratio had fallen to 1.7, and in 2070 it is expected to drop to 1.2, according to official projections".[4] The Times reported that the measures have been defended, with "the need to work longer as the inevitable response to rising life expectancy". As well, the cost of pensions has partially contributed to France's national debt rising to 112% of GDP, compared to 98% before the COVID-19 pandemic; this is one of the highest levels in the EU, higher than the UK and Germany.[5] In an interview in March 2023, Macron said that "when he began working there were 10 million French pensioners and now there were 17 million".[6] The New York Times add that in order "[t]o keep the system financially viable without funneling more taxpayer money into it — something the government already does — Macron sought to gradually raise the legal age when workers can start collecting a pension by three months every year until it reaches 64 in 2030." As well, Macron has "accelerated a previous change that increased the number of years that workers must pay into the system to get a full pension and abolished special pension ‌rules that benefited workers in sectors like energy and transportation".[4]

As part of Macron's pension reforms, the retirement age was to be raised to 64 or 65, from 62. It was pointed out in December 2022 that the pay-as-you-go system – that raising the retirement age would help to further finance, as life expectancies increase and more start work later – would have a surplus of €3.2bn in 2022, but the government's pensions advisory board (COR) forecast that it would "fall into structural deficits in coming decades unless new financing sources are found".[2] In March 2023, Labor Minister Olivier Dussopt said that "without immediate action" the pensions deficit would exceed $13bn annually by 2027. The government stated that the reforms would "balance the deficit" in 2030, with a surplus amounting to billions of dollars that would "pay for measures allowing those in physically demanding jobs to retire early".[3]

The pension reforms have been long-considered by Macron and his government. Reforming the pension system was a significant part of his platform for election in 2017, with initial protests and transport strikes in late 2019, prior to the COVID-19 pandemic which saw Macron delay the reforms further.[7][8] Raising the retirement age was not part of these initial reforms, but another "plan to unify the complex French pension system" by "getting rid of the 42 special regimes for sectors ranging from rail and energy workers to lawyers was crucial to keep the system financially viable".[9] On 26 October 2022, Macron announced in a televised interview that pension reform scheduled for 2023 intended to raise the retirement age to 65, specifically that the minimum retirement age to be able to receive a full pension would be "gradually increased" from 62 to 65 by 2031,[8] by three months per year from September 2023 to September 2030. Furthermore, the number of years that contributions would need to be made to qualify for the full state pension would increase from 42 to 43 in 2027,[10] meaning that some may have to work to 67 – the year at which a person is automatically able to receive a state pension from.[11][10] In addition to this, France's 42 separate pension schemes would be "streamlined".[2] Macron clarified he would be willing to "discuss the retirement age with unions and make potential amendments", and that not implementing the reforms would lead to a reduction in the size of pensions.[8]

Details of the reforms were scheduled to be revealed on 15 December 2022, but were delayed further to 10 January 2023, as a courtesy to the Greens and Republicans who were in the midst of electing new leaders; postponing the reforms to allow Macron to consult with said new leaders before revealing said details.[2]

In his New Year's Eve speech on 31 December 2022, he clarified that they would be implemented by autumn 2023.[7] In early January 2023 prior to consultation with unions, Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne spoke on FranceInfo radio, stating that the government could "show flexibility" on the intention to raise the retirement age to 65, and were willing to explore "other solutions" that would enable the government to "reach its target of balancing the pensions system by 2030". She announced that the policy would be presented to cabinet on January 23 and debated in parliament in early February, with full details published on January 10.[12]

Use of Article 49.3

Article 49.3 of the French Constitution allows governments to bypass the National Assembly and force through bills without a vote. However, invoking it triggers a proviso that allows for no-confidence motions to be filed in the government. On only one occasion, in 1962, where the Article has been triggered has the government lost a subsequent no-confidence motion.[13]

On 14 March, The Guardian declared that Macron had two options – broker deals with Les Républicains or force the bill through using Article 49.3, "a measure that avoids an Assemblée nationale vote [the government] risks losing". They said that "[m]inisters have said the government would not use the 49:3, widely condemned as undemocratic and which risks inflaming a volatile public mood" and that "[i]nstead, there has been a flurry of negotiations by ministers to guarantee a majority in the lower house"; "[u]nion leaders have said using the 49:3 would lead to a hardening of opposition and would escalate strikes".[14] On 16 March, it was said "[m]inutes before MPs in the lower house were to vote, Macron was still holding a series of frantic meetings with senior political figures, and suddenly chose to use special powers instead of risking a vote, which he appeared poised to lose".[15] The decision to invoke was a "surprise, last-minute decision" by Macron, as "he was not certain of the support of enough lawmakers" to take the bill to a National Assembly vote.[9]

The Guardian explained that 49.3's invoking "illustrates Macron's difficult position in parliament", his parliamentary party/grouping having lost its majority in the National Assembly in the 2022 legislative elections.[9]

Motivations

 
 
Members of seven different unions side-by-side, in a demonstration that walked through a shopping area in Sens on 11 March.

The co-ordination of the strikes by all of France's trade unions has been labelled a "rare show of unity",[9] with transport and energy workers, teachers, dockers and public sector workers (such as museum staff) having gone on strike. Trade unions "say the reform will penalise low-income people in manual jobs who tend to start their careers early, forcing them to work longer than graduates, who are less affected by the changes."[15]

Polls have consistently shown that the measures are substantially unpopular,[16] as well as the use of Article 49.3 to enact them without a parliamentary vote in the National Assembly. France 24 reported that a poll from a few days prior to the move suggested around "eight out of ten people opposed legislating in this way, including a majority of voters who backed Macron in the first round of last year's presidential election".[17] The American Prospect opined that earlier support from conservative members of the National Assembly for the reforms had faded away as a result of polling that showed the reforms were unpopular.[18] The decision to invoke Article 49.3 was seen by those on the left as a "a major defeat and a sign of weakness" for the government, that would now be seen as "being brutal and undemocratic";[15] Antoine Bristielle, a representative of the Fondation Jean-Jaures think tank, commented that using 49.3 is "perceived as a symbol of brutality" that could "erode support both for the government and democratic institutions".[17] Macron's approval ratings have deteriorated as a result.[16][19][20][specify]

It has been suggested that the reforms do not adequately tackle the disadvantage women are at within the workforce, who usually retire later than men and with pensions 40% lower in comparison, attributed to more part-time work and maternity leave.[11] Women are already subject to later retirement due to taking time away from work to raise children.[21] Euronews outlined that the reforms would lead to women retiring later and working, on average, seven months longer over the course of their life, while men would work around five months longer. They quoted Franck Riester, the Minister Delegate for Parliamentary Relations, admitting that women would be "a bit penalised by the reform" in January.[11]

As well as this, it has been argued the reforms will hit the working-class and those who work in manual jobs disproportionately. CNN pointed out that blue-collar workers are likely to start working at a younger age than white-collar workers; The Washington Post pointed out that those employed in 'physically or mentally demanding' jobs are still eligible to retire earlier with a full pension,[22] although The New York Times equally pointed to how this was a concession by the government to "mollify opposition", which overall has failed because unions view the increase in the retirement age as a "non-starter". At the other end of the scale, it has been reported that some are concerned about "being forced to retire later because older adults who want to work but who lose their jobs often face age discrimination in the labor market".[4]

 
Protest placard in Belfort on 15 March, reading "€1200 per day for the bosses".

Those opposed to the reforms argue "the government is prioritising businesses and people who are highly paid over average laborers",[23] and have "disputed the need for urgency", The New York Times saying they contest that "Macron is attacking a cherished right to retirement and unfairly burdening blue-collar workers because of his refusal to increase taxes on the wealthy". As well, opponents opine that Macron has "exaggerated the threat of projected deficits and refused to consider other ways to balance the system, like increasing worker payroll taxes, decoupling pensions from inflation or increasing taxes on wealthy households or companies", and that "the official body that monitors France's pension system has acknowledged that there is no immediate threat of bankruptcy and that long-term deficits", which Macron and the government have argued would occur if these reforms were not implemented, "were hard to accurately predict".[4]

Jean Garrigues, a historian on France's political culture, theorised the unpopularity of the reforms can be partially attributed to Macron personally, given the "pre-existing anger against" him, having "struggled to shake off the image of an out-of-touch 'president of the rich'". He said that "[t]hat's why he has not only all the unions, but also a large part of public opinion against him", as "[b]y tying himself to the project, opposition to it is heightened, dramatized in a way."[4]

It has been criticised for having taken place during a cost-of-living crisis,[24][better source needed] which some have attributed to worsening the anger and protests over the policies.[citation needed] The Times said that some have "questioned the political wisdom of going ahead with the reform at a time when the public mood has been soured by high inflation", as €7.1 billion of the €17.7 billion that "the reform was meant to have saved has been wiped out by modifications to its provisions".[5]

Pre-Article 49.3 invoking

19 January

 
Demonstration against the pension reforms unveiled by French government, Sens.

On 19 January, the Ministry of the Interior counted 1.12 million demonstrators, including 80,000 in Paris.[25] Over 200 demonstrations were reported in the country.[26]

More than one million people took to the streets in Paris and other French towns as part of countrywide protests over proposals to raise the retirement age.[27] Eight of the largest unions participated in the strike over pension reforms.[28] The French Ministry of the Interior said that 80,000 demonstrators gathered in the streets in Paris, where small numbers threw bottles, rocks, and fireworks at riot police.[28] Over 200 demonstrations were reported in the country.[26] According to the unions, 2 million people took part in the demonstrations with 400,000 of them participating in the Paris demonstrations.[27]

Despite the demonstrations, Emmanuel Macron emphasized that the pension reforms would go forward. French unions declared that further strikes and protests would be held on 31 January in an effort to halt the government's plans to raise the standard retirement age from 62 to 64.[27] The new law would increase annual pension contributions, from 41 to 43 payments throughout the year.[29] Some flights out of Orly Airport were canceled, while the Eurostar website reported the cancellation of many routes between Paris and London. Though "a few delays" were reported at Charles de Gaulle Airport, owing to striking air traffic controllers, no flights were canceled.[28]

 
Reims on 19 January.
Number of demonstrators in the 10 most populated cities
City According to the police According to the unions
Paris[30] 80,000 400,000
Marseille[31][32] 26,000 140,000
Lyon[33] 23,000 38,000
Toulouse[34][35] 36,000 50,000
Nice[36][37] 7,500 20,000
Nantes[38] 40,000 75,000
Montpellier[39][40] 15,000 25,000
Strasbourg[41][42] 10,500 N/A
(18,000 to 20,000 according to media sources)
Bordeaux[43][44] 16,000 60,000
Lille[45] 16,000 50,000

21 January

 
Paris on 21 January.

Another demonstration was organized in Paris on 21 January, supposedly long-planned by students and youth organisations.[46]

Demonstrations organized by different groups took place in other cities, like in Dinan,[47] Limoges[48] and Lyon.[49]

31 January

 
Demonstration in Bordeaux on 31 January.

Demonstrations were organized around the country with public transport, schools, and electricity production specifically targeted by the strikes. Public television broadcasters were also affected by the strikes, with news broadcasts cancelled and music played instead.[50]

According to the CGT union, 2.8 million people took part in the protests while the Ministry of Internal Affairs counted 1.272 million protesters.[25]

Number of demonstrators in the 10 most populated cities
City According to the police According to the unions
Paris 87,000 500,000
Marseille 40,000 205,000
Lyon 23,000 45,000
Toulouse 34,000 80,000
Nice 7,000 25,000
Nantes 28,000 65,000
Montpellier 25,000 30,000
Strasbourg 10,500 22,000
Bordeaux 16,000 75,000
Lille 15,000 70,000

7 February

On 7 February, a third day of national protests were held after being called by l'intersyndicale. According to the CGT, 400,000 people demonstrated in Paris, down 100,000 from the 31 of January. In total, over 2,000,000 strikers participated in demonstrations according to the CGT, while the police estimate that around 757,000 strikers participated in protests.[51]

11 February

On 11 February, a fourth day of national protests was held. According to the CGT, over 2,500,000 protesters took part in demonstrations, a rise of 500,000 compared to 7 February, while the Ministry of the Interior claims that 963,000 protested, a rise of over 200,000 compared to 7 February. In Paris, over 500,000 people demonstrated against the reform according to the CGT, while 93,000 demonstrated according to the prefecture. The Intersyndicale called for recurring strikes starting on 7 March. [52]

16 February

On 16 February, protesters joined fresh rallies and strikes. Unions said some 1.3 million people participated nationwide Thursday, the lowest figure since the protest movement started on January 19. The interior ministry put the national figure at 440,000, down from nearly a million on Saturday (11 Feb). On the day, 30 percent of flights from Paris's Orly airport were cancelled.[53]

7 March

 
Auch (Occitania) on 11 March.

In early March, trains around the country continued to be affected by strikes and protests. It is believed that 1.1 to 1.4 million people participated in over 260 protests across the country. As a part of the protest, union members blocked fuel deliveries from being made, with the intention of bringing the French economy to its knees.[54]

11–12 March

On Saturday, 11 March, the seventh day of protests was held in response to the National Assembly and Senate debating the draft law, with a final vote expected that month. Macron twice declined meetings with unions that week. About 368,000 people protested, below the 800,000–1,000,000 expected. The following day, the Senate passed an initial vote by 195–112.[55][56]

15 March

 
Montauban (Occitania) on 15 March.

On 14 March, The Guardian claimed that "French unions have called for a show of force with a final day of strikes and protests in the run-up" the vote on the reforms in the National Assembly, which would be the eighth day of national mobilisation sofar. Transport Minister Clément Beaune said "there would be disruption to public transport and flights, but it was unlikely to be a "Black Wednesday"", with "not ... the same level of disruptions as with previous mobilisations".[14]

200 protests were reported to have taken place across the country.[57] There were conflicting numbers of the strength of the protests; the Interior Ministry reported 480,000 marched throughout the country, with 37,000 in Paris, while CGT counted 1.78m and 450,000 respectively.[58] Figures from Le Monde dispute both these claims.[59] Reportedly, French police expected 650,000–850,000 protesters nationwide, fewer than the largest protests the previous week, with preliminary figures demonstrating a lower strike turnout in the energy and transport sectors at midday compared to previous days.[58]

Among those who were on strike were train drivers, school teachers, dock workers, oil refinery workers, as well as garbage collectors continuing their now ten-day strike action.[57]

In the afternoon, protesters gathered at the Esplanade des Invalides,[58] with "loud music and huge union balloons". Police had ordered that the build-up of rubbish to be "cleared out along the march route" after some "used garbage to start fires or throw trash at police in recent demonstrations". The marchers were "accompanied by a heavy security force" as they "moved through the Left Bank along unencumbered streets". Police reported that one group of protestors "attacked a small business", and that nine people were detained within three hours of the march beginning.[57] The protestors' march ended at the Place d'Italie. Known as "Greve 15 mars", it was co-ordinated and organised by eight trade unions.[58]

 
The front of the march organised by multiple trade unions on 15 March.

Liquefied natural gas operations were suspended,[58] with public transport severely affected; it was stated that 40% of high-speed trains and half the regional trains were cancelled, with the Paris Metro running slower. The DGAC warned of delays, reporting that 20% of the flights at Paris-Orly airport were cancelled.[57]

Elsewhere, in Rennes, Nantes, and Lyon, "[s]ecurity forces countered violence with charges and tear gas", according to French media.[57] Demonstrations also took place in Le Havre in Normandy, Nice,[60] and Mulhouse.[61]

PBS reported that Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin had asked Paris City Hall to force some of the garbage workers to return to work, calling the build-up along the streets a "a public health issue". Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo said that she supported the strike, and in response a government spokesman Olivier Véran declared that if she did not comply, the Interior Ministry would be "ready to act instead".[57]

Invoking of Article 49.3 and aftermath

16 March

Invoking of Article 49.3

 
Announcement of the invoking of Article 49.3 in the National Assembly.

Protests erupted after the announcement that the pension reforms would be enacted without a parliamentary vote, Borne invoking article 49:3 of the constitution to do so just "minutes" before the scheduled vote on the bill.[62] Inside the National Assembly, opposition MPs on the left booed and jeered the announcement[17] and sang the national anthem[63] in order to prevent Borne from speaking,[64] forcing the session to be briefly suspended before the announcement by Borne was made.[63][65] Speaking to MPs who were booing her, Borne proclaimed that "[w]e cannot gamble on the future of our pensions ... The reform is necessary."[66][15]

Marine Le Pen announced she would file a no-confidence motion in the government,[67] describing the use of Article 49.3 as "an extraordinary confession of weakness,"[66] "a total failure for the government", and that Borne should resign.[15] Fabien Roussel of the Communist Party, who also "called on street protesters and trade unionists to keep mobilising",[15] stated that the left was ready to make the same motion;[68] Socialist Party leader Olivier Faure "accused Macron of deploying a "permanent coup d'état" to shove through the legislation". The Week said that "Macron and his government insist the reforms are needed to keep the pension system solvent and government borrowing acceptably low".[66]

Politicians from across the political spectrum denounced the move. Conservative MPs, such as those from Les Republicains, whom Macron has relied upon for support in votes in the National Assembly, "rebuke[d] the government, warning that its move would radicalise opponents and undercut the law's democratic legitimacy."[17] The Times reported that Macron was thought to have "hoped earlier on Thursday to hold — and win — a parliamentary vote but changed tack after learning that only 35 of the 64 Republican MPs would back the reform, leaving him short of a majority", quoting Labor Minister Olivier Dussopt, who said that they "did everything [to have a vote] right up to the last minute".[5] MoDem MPs, who are aligned with Macron's Renaissance group, said the decision to force the bill through "was a mistake"; Erwan Balanant said "he had left the parliament chamber "in a state of shock"", while "[o]ther centrist MPs said it was a waste and showed weakness".[15]

Reaction by protesters

In the Place de la Concorde, thousands protested (figures are disputed between 2,000 protesters and 7,000[69][70][67][71]). France 24 reported that it was a "spontaneous and unplanned rally",[67] but Le Monde stated that it was "organized by the union Solidaires and authorized by the administrative court". La France Insoumise leader Jean-Luc Melenchon spoke to the crowd, declaring that Macron had gone "over the heads of the will of the people."[72] He also claimed the reform had "no legitimacy – neither in parliament, nor in the street".[17] It is possible that many joined the rally in Paris after being turned away by police from the "blockade of the Veolia warehouse in Aubervilliers".[72]

 
Demonstrations in Nantes in the evening of 16 March.

Later, a bonfire was lit,[69] with police armed with shields and batons deploying tear gas in an attempt to clear the square[62] at around 8pm.[73] One police officer was reportedly injured.[15]

By nightfall, 120 people were reported to have been arrested, according to Parisian police,[62] "on suspicion of seeking to cause damage";[73] by 11:30pm,[74] the number later rose to 217.[72] Protesters in the Place were observed to have thrown cobbled stones at assembled police before they moved in to break up the groups,[63][67] using tear gas and water cannons,[15] with smaller sections of protesters running down side streets and setting smaller fires,[69] such as to piles of garbage,[73] and "caused damage to shop fronts".[15] Numerous makeshift barricades in Paris streets were set alight.[75]

The CGT announced further strikes and demonstrations for 23 March;[62] its head, Philippe Martinez, said that the forcing through of the law "shows contempt towards the people",[64] with unions describing the move by the government as "a complete denial of democracy".[74] France 24 commented that "unionists were also out in strength, hailing a moral victory even as they denounced Macron's "violation of democracy"".[17]

Protests took place in other cities, such as Rennes, Nantes, Lyon, Toulouse, and Marseille.[22] In the latter, shop windows and bank fronts were smashed, for which "radical leftist groups" were partially blamed,[69] with shops looted. Protests in the former three cities were reported to have resulted in clashes between protesters and police,[73] and in Lyon consisted of approximately "400 people gathered in front of administrative offices, calling for the president to resign".[72] There had been a brief blockade of the National Library early in the day.[17]

The following day, Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin told RTL radio that 310 had been arrested in relation to protest action nationwide, with 258 in Paris.[70]

Macron made no public comment on 16 March, but AFP reported that "he told a closed-door cabinet meeting: "You cannot play with the future of the country.""[15]

17 March

Demonstrations once again took place at the Place de la Concorde, attended by several thousand people "with chants, dancing and a huge bonfire,"[70] protesters chanting "Tax the rich",[76][better source needed] before riot police intervened using tear gas to clear the square, after some "climbed scaffolding on a renovation site, arming themselves with wood", and "lobbed fireworks and paving stones at police in a standoff".[70] On Twitter, a clip of protesters gathered at the Place chanting "we decapitated Louis XVI and we can start again, Macron" went viral,[77] with protesters also, more generally, calling for Macron to resign.[78] Broadcaster BFMTV reported that police detained 61 people following the protests.[79] The Times claimed that the protestors' "ranks were swollen by members of the 'black bloc' – young masked troublemakers out for a fight".[5] Notably, head of the 'moderate' CFDT union, Laurent Berger, said that a change in government or Prime Minister "will not put out this fire, only withdrawing the reform."[80]

Additionally, Paris's Boulevard Périphérique was "disrupted at almost 200 points during peak rush hour" in the morning,[79] by CGT activists.[81] It was also reported that there was "escalated strikes" at refineries,[79] with a blockade of an unspecified refinery in southern France having began earlier in the day.[82] A CGT representative claimed that strikes would "force the shutdown" of TotalEnergies' Normandy refinery by the weekend, furthering the industrial action;[81] a rolling strike was already in place there, with strikers continuing to deliver less fuel than normal from other sites.[70] (DW reported on 18 March that CGT had already shut it down by Friday evening, however.[82]) The CGT also announced an extension to picket lines at Electricite de France.[81]

Smaller protests and rallies took place in Bordeaux, Toulouse,[79] Toulon and Strasbourg.[80] Specific methods of protest across France reported were street furniture being destroyed, bins set alight, and windows smashed. In Dijon, protesters burned effigies of Macron.[81] Protests also took place in smaller towns like Laval and Évreux.[74]

Earlier in the day, police pepper-sprayed students protesting near Sorbonne University, with some also walking out of lectures.[79] In Lille, the Institute of Political studies was blocked by student protesters.[61] Strikers of the CGT union "voted to halt production at one of the country's largest refineries by this weekend or Monday at the latest", having "already been on a rolling strike at the northern site TotalEnergies de Normandie, and halting production would escalate the industrial action and spark fears of fuel shortages", with striking workers continuing to "deliver less fuel than normal from several other sites".[74] In Bordeaux, "dozens" of protesters and demonstrators trespassed onto tracks at the main train station, including CGT unionists, with CGT and NPA flags being flown.[74][61] In Donges, a roadblock was in place near to the TotalEnergie refinery oil terminals;[3][61] in Valenciennes, striking workers blocked the entry of a fuel depot while police in riot gear were observed removing tyres from the road near it; striking rubbish collection workers clashed with police at the Ivry-sur-Seine incinerator; and the blockade of the port of Marseille by striking workers of the CGT continued.[61] Unions from SNCF, the national train operator, "urged workers to continue another continuous strike".[83]

A multi-party no-confidence motion was tabled in the National Assembly earlier in the day. Spearheaded by centrist group Liot, it was co-signed by NUPES,[70] with a total of 91 MPs from five different parliamentary groups signing.[79] Later in the day, National Rally filed a separate no-confidence motion,[70] signed by 81 cross-party MPs;[79] party leader Le Pen said the decision to push through the pension changes was "a total failure for the government".[80]

On RTL radio, Interior Minister "warned against what he called the chaos of random, spontaneous street demonstrations", describing "[t]he opposition is legitimate, the protests are legitimate, but wreaking havoc is not, and "denounced the fact that effigies of Macron, Borne and other ministers were burned at a protest in Dijon" and that ""public buildings had been targeted". Aurore Bergé, head of Renaissance in parliament, wrote to Darmanin "asking him to ensure the protection of MPs who feared violence against them", because "she would not accept MPs living in "fear of reprisals"". He replied, saying "police would be vigilant against any violence directed towards lawmakers."[74]

18 March

On 18 March, it was announced protests in Paris were banned on the Place de la Concorde, opposite parliament, as well at the Champs-Élysées. Police explained this was due to "serious risks of disturbances to public order and security", and said those who did not obey this order could be fined.[84] Nevertheless, a bonfire was lit at the Place de la Concorde, with an effigy of Macron dropped onto it to cheers.[85] Despite this, widespread protests were still reported in Paris,[22] with a rally instead planned for Place d'Italie in southern Paris at 6pm that evening,[84][21] at which demonstrators chanted, once again, for Macron to resign, and "Macron is going to break down, we are going to win".[86] 4,000 were present.[82] Barricades were erected in the streets, rubbish bins were set alight,[16] with the glass on billboards and bus shelters smashed. Barriers used to block the streets[82] and bottles were thrown at riot police,[16] who utilised tear gas and water cannons to disperse protesters. 81 arrests were made in the vicinity.[86][16] protesters who gathered at the Place d'Italie then "marched toward Europe's biggest waste incineration plant, which has become a flashpoint of tensions", some setting trash cans alight and chanting mottos "such as "the streets are ours" as firefighter sirens wailed".[85] Politico, quoting the Ministry of the Interior, later reported 122 had been arrested in Paris, with a total of 169 nationwide.[20]

 
Gathering of demonstrators in Belfort on the afternoon of 18 March.

Police also used tear gas against protesters who started a fire in Bordeaux,[86][87] as BFMTV showed demonstrations in major cities such as Marseille, Compiegne, Nantes (where around a thousand protested),[16] Brest,[22] and Montpellier,[82] with around 200 protesting in Lodeve in the south of France.[21] In Nice, the political office of the leader of the Republicans, Eric Ciotti, was ransacked, with tags left that threatened riots if the party refused to support any of the motions of no-confidence in the government.[16] In the afternoon in Nantes, protestors threw bottles at police, who also responded with tear gas;[83] in spite of this, DW described the protests in Nantes, as well as Marseille and Montpellier, as "mostly peaceful marches",[82] as did the AP. They reported that in Marseille, protesters eluded police and occupied the main train station for approximately 15 minutes. In Besancon, "hundreds of demonstrators lit a brazier and burned voter cards.[85] In Lyon, some demonstrators tried to break into a town hall and set it alight, with police arresting 36;[83] police claimed that ""groups of violent individuals" triggered clashes".[87]

A spokesperson for TotalEnergies reported that 37% of its operational staff at refineries and depots, such as at Feyzin and Normandy, were on strike. Rolling strikes also continued on railways. Students and activists from the Permanent Revolution collective "briefly invaded" the Forum des Halles shopping mall, with banners calling for a general strike and chanting for Paris to "stand up" and "rise up",[21] and letting off red smoke canisters.[82][5] A representative of a union representing waste collectors said strikers at three incinerators outside of Paris would allow some trucks through to "limit the risk of an epidemic",[16], while police claimed trucks from five depots had restarted work. CGT announced "strikers were halting production at two refineries over the weekend".[83]

CGT announced the shutdown of France's largest refinery, TotalEnergies' Gonfreville-L'Orcher (Seine-Maritime) site,[88] and "at least two oil refineries might be shut down starting Monday". Industry Minister Roland Lescure announced the government could order those striking to return to work in order to help avoid fuel shortages.[85]

AP reported that the DGAC had requested 30% of flights at Orly Airport to be cancelled, and 20% in Marsille, for Monday 20 March.[85]

19 March

"Hundreds" of protesters were reported in Paris, Lyon, Marseille, and Lille in the evening.[88] In Marseille, a large bonfire was lit, with a large throng of demonstrators dancing around it.[89][better source needed]

Some neighbourhoods of Paris continued to have collection of waste disrupted; Philippe Martinez from CGT "urged" Paris collection workers to continue their now-two-week-long strike.[87][88][90] A few hundred people protested outside the Les Halles shopping centre before police moved them on. Early on Sunday, "dozens" of union activists marched through a shopping mall in Rosny-sous-Bois,[90] and cars were allowed to pass through the tolls on the A1 and A13 motorways for free during the day.[88] Shutdowns of refineries continued, with reports of petrol queues building up in the south of France; authorities claimed that "supplies were high enough to avoid shortages".[87]

In response to reports of constituency offices of various MPs being vandalized, Macron "called the speakers of both houses of parliament to affirm his support for all legislators and said the government was mobilized to "put everything in place to protect them" late on 19 March.[90]

Macron also made his first public statement since 16 March; issued to AFP, he said that he hoped "the text on pensions can go to the end of its democratic journey with respect for all". Bruno Le Maire, the Finance Minister, commented further; "[t]hose among us who are able will gradually need to work more to finance our social model, which is one of the most generous in the world". Leader of the Republicans, Eric Ciotti, said his party would not back the no-confidence motions, as he "refuses to 'add chaos to chaos'"; consequently, it was expected that the motions would not pass, as the Republicans act as de-facto kingmakers in the National Assembly, neither Macron's bloc or the other opposition parties combined numbering a majority. NUPES' Jean-Luc Melenchon informed RTL that "[f]or as long as the 64-year reform is on the table, we have to keep it up, but decried the use of violence, advising protesters to not "make our struggle invisible with practices that would be turned against us, as "Macron... is counting on people going too far, so as to profit from a situation of fear."[91] The Times reported that, in response to Ciotti's party refusing to support the motions, and that some Republican MPs may not follow their leader's decision, National Rally president Jordan Bardella was attempting to "persuade more to follow suit by promising his party will not put up candidates against them if the crisis does lead to an election".[5]

20 March

Morning and afternoon

DW reported, on 18 March, that union leaders were anticipating that some airports would see nearly a third of flights cancelled on 20 March, owing to strike action.[82] easyJet and Ryanair, both British airlines, warned passengers to expect disruption. Ryanair said it was "expecting possible cancellations and delays on flights to and from France from 20 to 23 March." Eurostar announced that trains would run a normal service on 20 and 21 March, but there would be disruption to public transport in Lille on 20 March.[92]

In the morning, rubbish piles were set alight around the ring road in Rennes as part of a road blockade, with protesters also blockading waste collection points and the nearby Vern-sur-Seiche oil depot was blockaded.[93] The road blockade was attended by a "few hundred people". It began at 6:30am, and led to "over 15 miles of halted traffic around the city". Police used tear gas and charged towards protesters who were on the road and in surrounding fields.[94] Shortly before midday, it was announced they had all been lifted.[93][95][96] However, a damaged road in Porte de Saint-Malo meant the speed limit was temporarily reduced to 70 kilometers per hour.[95] Crisis24 said that industrial action at oil refineries was "starting to impact fuel supplies", with shortages of fuel at stations, "particularly" in Marseille and the south of the country.[97] Sky News, on 17 March, stated that garbage collection strikes are set to continue until at least 20 March.[79]

SNCF has warned of "disruption to intercity and regional train services", with only two out of three trains running on several lines of Paris' RATP network. Crisis24 reported that such disruptions will continue until 23 March, when the national strike will exacerbate service provision.[97]

On 17 March, teachers' unions called for strikes in the following weeks, possibly disrupting the baccalauréat exams,[78] which begin on 20 March. CFDT's Laurent Berger proclaimed that she wished for no disruption to the exams as they could just worsen the already-high stress levels of the students taking them.[87]

39% of TotalEnergie workers were on strike.[98] Le Monde reported that half "of filling stations lacked one or more fuels in the southeastern region of Provence Alpes Côte d'Azur, requiring local authorities to limit sales until Thursday", with prohibition on the filling of jerry cans, and "many areas" in the west of the country affected by the continued blockade, and closure, of the Donges refinery. As well as this, they quoted figures from the UFIP oil lobby that 7% of the country's petrol stations were affected by fuel shortages,[99] (up from 4% prior to the weekend; and that only 5–8 of 200 storage facilities were blocked)[100] meaning "people in major cities in particular would be "suffering"; this was worse in some areas, as in Marseille, "around half of petrol stations are reporting shortages, with an estimated 40 per cent completely closed in Bouches-du-Rhône",[99] and that "the Paris region could be hit by shortages at the storage facility of Genevilliers, northwest of the French capital".[100] The "collaborative website" Penurie.mon-essence.fr said that approximately 986 fuel stations were "plagued by partial shortages", with 739 out of fuel "completely".[99] Olivier Gantois, executive chairman of UFIP, said "[t]here will only be a shortage if people continue to rush to fill up", and that "[i]f customers panic, logistics will fail and we will be out of supply"; Le Monde added such comments were "in belief that shortages are the sole result of preemptive purchases on the part of consumers".[100]

No-confidence votes

Aftermath; evening

Spontaneous protests erupted throughout Paris. In the afternoon, those on the streets reacted to the results of the vote by chanting "Macron démission" ("Macron step down"). In the evening, in Place Vauban, protesters gathered, chanting "Macron resign!" and "Aux armes" (Take up arms), with police "push[ing] them back and blocked access to the square". Barricades were erected along the Rue de Rivoli.[13] In Paris, protesters burned objects such as rubbish bins and bikes.[106]

CNN reported "heavy police presence across the capital as demonstrators moved between locations",[98] with AP quoting Paris police chief Laurent Nunez, who said the violence was "caused by groups of up to 300 people quickly moving through the capital".[107] At least 70 people were arrested in Paris in the evening,[98] which later rose to 234;[106] most were arrested for setting rubbish strewn in the streets alight.[107]

 
Bonfire on Place de l'Opéra in the evening of 20 March.

Reuters reported that "[i]n some of Paris' most prestigious avenues, firefighters scrambled to put out burning rubbish piles left uncollected for days due to strikes as protesters played cat-and-mouse with police" and "[u]nions and opposition parties said they would step up protests to try and force a u-turn". A CGT statement read that "[n]othing undermines the mobilisation of workers," and called for workers to 'step up' industrial action and "participate massively in rolling strikes and demonstrations."[103] Nunez announced that an internal investigation would take place after footage of an officer punching a man walking backwards, causing him to fall to the ground, went viral on French social media.[107][108]

AP said that the protests that took place in cities across France were predominantly "small" and "scattered", with only some "degenerating into violence" late in the day.[107] In Bordeaux, a predominantly-young group of 200–300 people chanted for Macron to resign. A "couple" of rubbish bins were set alight, with the gathered protesters chanting "This will blow up".[103] Protests were also reported in Dijon, and in Strasbourg where protestors smashed a department store's windows. 287 people in total were arrested nationwide.[106]

The office of Prime Minister Borne announced late in the evening that she will "directly submit the text of the new law to France's Constitutional Council for a review", and that she hopes that "all the points raised during the debates can be examined"; referring, as France 24 says, to the challenges raised by some parliamentarians on the constitutionality of certain measures in the pension reforms.[13] Opponents of the reforms on the left and far-right have submitted requests for review; only once the Constitutional Council has approved the bill can it be formally signed into law, and it can "reject articles within the measure if they aren't in line with the constitution", with those opposed saying the text "as a whole should be rejected"; Borne's office added that the referral was to "accelerate the process". Furthermore, she "expressed the government's 'solidarity'" towards the 400 police officers who were injured in recent days, with 42 alone overnight.[107] The Constitutional Council has a month to "consider any objections" to the bill.[98]

21 March

On 21 March, Macron announced he does not intend to dissolve the National Assembly for new elections, reshuffle the government, or call a referendum for a "a reform he considers necessary for the survival of the system",[106] nor intends to withdraw the reforms. This was reasserted by Prime Minister Borne and Labor Minister Dussopt in Parliament; additionally, Borne said the government would attempt to involve the public and unions in legislating more in future, though offered no details as to how, and the two both agreed they had "devoted as much time to dialogue on the pension bill as possible". Macron, instead, plans to use a TV interview on 22 March to "calm things down" and plan and prepare for further reforms to take place over the rest of his term in office. Reuters reported on 21 March of the unease within the parties that Macron is aligned, or close, to, and that the President should not be "continuing business as usual amid violent protests and rolling strikes that represent the most serious challenge to the centrist president's authority since the "Yellow Vest" revolt". Gilles Le Gendre, a senior Renaissance MP, said that "the president, the government and the majority ... are all weekend" and that "[i] [t's not because the law was adopted that we can do business as usual". Also of Renaissance, Patrick Vignal "bluntly urged the president to suspend the pension reform bill" due to "the anger it has triggered, and its deep unpopularity".[108]

Reuters quoted Eurointelligence analysts, who said Macron has two choices: "[p]retending that nothing major happened and letting the crisis wear itself out, or pursuing co-habitation with the willing in the assembly. Given Macron's nature, we see him being more attracted to the first option. A risky bet." [108]

On 20 March, CNN reported that "[a]uthorities in charge of civil air traffic asked airlines to cancel 20% of their flights on Tuesday and Wednesday, and Air France warned of flight cancellations in the upcoming days".[98]

Police "were sent in the early hours of Tuesday to unblock the oil terminal of Donges ... which had been occupied for a week by strikers. The Ministry of Energy Transition "also announced the requisition of "three employees per shift" at an oil storage facility in Fos-sur-Mer", due to "worsening supply tensions"; they clarified that "[t]he requisition is valid for 48 hours as needed, starting March 21," and relates to "personnel essential to the operation of the storage facility"".[100]

"Hundreds" of workers have blocked access to the gas depots in a town near Marseille,[106] with strikes at multiple refineries across western and southern France, "partially disrupt[ing]" oil shipments.[107] Striking workers clashing with police at ExxonMobil's Fos-sur-Mer oil refinery, as the Energy Transition Ministry announced it would need employees "indispensable to the functioning" of the depot to return to work. "Scuffles broke out", with protesters joining strikers in response to the news. Protestors attempted to block access to the site, some "intermittently thr[owing] objects" such as stones at police, which used tear gas to try to disperse the demonstrators.[108][107][109] AP added that the depot supplies fuel for southeastern France gas stations, which are currently most afflicted by shortages; government spokesman Olivier Veran "warned that more orders may follow in the coming days for other sites". In Paris, police Paris announced they had ordered rubbish collectors back to work to "ensure a 'minimum service'; this will cover 674 staff, with 206 garbage trucks resuming operation.[107]

The Guardian, in an article dated 21 March, detailed activity at a blockaded incineration plant in Ivry-sur-Seine, south of Paris. A "crowd of students gathered to support the strikers" at the depot, with only "a slow dribble of very few rubbish trucks ... now passing each day" there. The blockade has been ongoing since at least 14 March, with some strikers and their supporters having attended as early as 5am over the course of the action.[110]

In the morning, police had evacuated Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne University's Tolbiac campus, having been previously blockaded and barricaded by students (which has notorious precedent in that regard); an attendee mentioned that many young students there had spoken of their experiences of police violence. Outside the École Duperré art school, students had "piled up a barricade of bins", with signs saying that the decision to raise the retirement age "would be met with a new May 1968"; one student interviewed said she was too frightened of being the victim of police violence at night to demonstrate at that time of day.[110] Skips were set alight during a protest in Rennes.[111]

22 March

At lunchtime, Macron gave a televised interview, questioned by journalists from TF1 and France 2. He called the reform not a "luxury" or a "pleasure", but a "necessity", and that he did not "enjoy passing this reform", and "had a responsibility not to leave the issue alone despite its unpopularity". Of the protests, he "said protesters had a right to take to the streets and their anger had been taken into account, but it was not acceptable when they resorted to violence without any rules whatsoever", and he insisted he had continued confidence in Prime Minister Borne, and regrets "not succeeding in convincing people of the necessity of the reform".[6]

The CGT and CFDT union heads responded; of the former, Philippe Martinez said that the interview was "outlandish", and "had taken millions of protesters for fools in claiming his reforms were the only alternative", and adding that "[t]he best response we can give the president is to have millions of people on strike and in the streets tomorrow," while Laurent Berger of the former accusing Macron of "rewriting history and lying to hide his failure to secure a majority in parliament", with specific regard to his comments unions had not offered an alternative to the bill. Berger was quoted as having "scolded" the president for "for seeking to portray the pension dispute as a tussle "between one responsible (man) and a group of irresponsibles"".[112] Marine Le Pen said "she would not play "any part in putting out the fire" as the president was the only one who had the keys to a political crisis he had himself created", and, pointing out that the interview being broadcast during lunchtime news programmes mostly watched by pensioners – which Reuters stated was "the only demographic that is not dead set against the reform" – was an example of Macron's "disdain for workers", and how "[h]e insults all French people, in general, all those who ... are protesting".[6][113]

Protest-wise, striking workers "briefly blocked" a TGV high speed train during a demonstration at a Nice railway station. Protesters also blocked a train station in Toulouse.[113]

Additionally, it was reported that 13% of petrol stations are undergoing fuel shortages due to oil refinery blockades, and that "almost half the pumps in the Bouches-du-Rhône area of the south have run dry". Unions also said that "up to half of primary school teachers would go on strike as part of Thursday's day of action but demonstrations were continuing on Wednesday, including outside the southern port of Marseille-Fos".[6] News.com.au reported that "[m]ajor fuel shortages are also impacting service stations across the country due to protesters blocking major locations, with the biggest nationwide protest on record for France recorded this week, with rallies held in more than 200 separate areas".[99]

23 March

CGT had announced on 16 March that the unions planned another day of strikes and demonstrations for 23 March,[11][114] the ninth day of nationwide industrial action since the pension reform strikes began.[82] The largest protest was expected to be in Paris, with demonstrators departing from Place de la Bastille at 2pm, marching through the city via Place de la République, and arriving at Place de l'Opéra at 7pm.[97][115]

Strike action

Public transport was severely impacted by strikes. Only two Paris metro lines were running normal service. By late morning, there was large disruption to rail services across France, with SNCF saying that only one-in-three regional TER trains and one-in-two TGV or Ouigo services running.[116] At Gare de Lyon train station, several hundred unionists and strikers demonstrated on the railway tracks.[117] An unofficial protest in front of Terminal 1 at Charles de Gaulle Airport blocked vehicle access.[118][119][120] The Directorate General of Civil Aviation warned of disruption to flights at Paris-Orly, Marseille-Provence, Lyon and Toulouse.[116] Around 30% of flights at Paris Orly Airport were cancelled, and flight services were expected to be reduced through the weekend.[117]

The Snuipp-FSU union said 40–50% of primary school teachers were on strike, with strong walkouts anticipated in Paris and departments such as Bouches-du-Rhône, Pyrénées-Orientales and Haute-Vienne.[116] The Education Ministry stated that about 24% of primary and middle school teachers walked off the job, as well as 15% in high schools.[121] Exam supervisors also went on strike, disrupting baccalauréat exams, with over half a million students impacted.[116]

Workers voted to strike at an LNG terminal in Dunkirk, reducing output to the minimum. Amid oil refinery and depot blockades, 14% of petrol stations were experiencing shortages of at least one type of fuel, with 7% dry.[122] The impact varied nationwide, with reports suggesting that 40 out of 96 departments are affected, particularly in the north in Brittany and Normandy, as well as the Mediterranean coast. The government mandated minimum staffing at all depots.[123]

The entrance to Paris-Panthéon-Assas University, widely considered the top law school of France, was barricaded; France 24 commented this was "a sign of just how broad the protest movement has become".[112] Major tourist attractions such as the Eiffel Tower, the Arc de Triomphe and the Versailles Palace were closed to the public.[123]

Protests

 
Number of protesters by city, according to numbers released by police.[124]

The Independent claimed over "12,000 police officers have taken positions in French streets with 5,000 in Paris, as authorities brace for the biggest strike action".[119]

Numbers of demonstrators vary. The Interior Ministry said up to 1.08m took part in protests across France, with 119,000 in Paris; the latter is the highest number to have protested in Paris since the strikes and protests related to the reforms began in January. The CGT union, meanwhile, claimed 3.5m nationwide, and 800,000 in Paris.[123]

 
Demonstrators flying flags and balloons of various unions in Paris on 23 March.

Demonstrations in Paris began at the Place de la Bastille at 2pm local time.[97][121] ITV News reported in the early afternoon that it was "currently the site of a large demonstration", and also that "[h]uge crowds have started marching in the major cities of Marseille, Lyon, Paris and Nantes as more than 250 protests were organised across the country".[117]

Philippe Martinez, head of the CGT union said that "[t]here is a lot of anger, an explosive situation" at the start of a rally in Paris, as Reuters claimed that union leaders had "called for calm but were angry with what they called Macron's "provocative" comments".[120] Posters along the route of the demonstrations in Paris included those demanding a return to the retirement age of 60, and depicting Macron as Louis XVI.[125] A heavy presence of "[h]eavily armed riot police" was reported.[126] At around 2:40pm GMT, journalist Lewis Goodall claimed that "[t]he main demonstration route [in Paris] is full [and so] they're now filing onto every side street".[127] He quoted the CGT union's claims that 800,000 were demonstrating in Paris.[128] At around 4:05pm GMT, he tweeted that French TV were reporting 14 were arrested so far, presumably in Paris.[129]

 
Demonstrators on the July Column.

BBC News said "the vast majority" of protests "passed off without violence", but in the afternoon, "violent clashes" were reported to have "broken out in parts of Paris", riot police having used tear gas as 'black bloc' protesters were reported to have thrown fireworks, bottles and stones at police and set bins alight. Riot police were also observed using baton charges on the Grands Boulevards. At other times on the march, fires in the streets ignited some of the uncollected piles of rubbish, with some small fires "visible from the junction of Rue Saint-Fiacre and Boulevard Poissonnière".[123]

 
Aftermath of a fire on Rue Saint Marc.

Mid-afternoon, clashes between police and protesters in Paris had grown more intense. On the Boulevard Bonne Nouvelle, one BFMTV report said "the atmosphere has changed completely" and that "[w]e didn't expect it to get out of hand so quickly". BFMTV also reported that there were at least 350–400 'black bloc' protesters, using "big" fireworks, and at point targeting a Strasbourg-St Denis McDonald's restaurant. A reporter claimed that police are deploying tear gas to push back the crowds, but the "huge number of people present are making it hard to disperse the 'troublemakers'"; this was especially the cast at the Place de la République, where police claimed they were targeted. They estimated around a thousand 'troublemakers' were "among the peaceful protesters".[123]

By 5pm local time, demonstrators in Paris had converged on the Place de l'Opéra. Firecrackers and bins set alight around Avenue de l'Opéra were reported. At around 5:20pm, it was reported that that police on motorbikes had arrived in the Opera area. Known as the Motos Brav-M, it is a "controversial police unit", as "some have accused [them] of using excessive force". They were "booed and hissed" at as they "passed further away down Boulevard de l'Opera". By 6pm, "most people [were] now dispersing", but "low-level clashes between police and small groups of rioters [who have] been throwing stones and starting fires" persisted. Up to 5,000 security staff were put on duty in Paris for the day.[123]


Protesters and demonstrations in Mans
 
 

320 protests were planned across the country, with the biggest demonstrations in the southern towns of Marseille, Nice, and Toulon; in the former two, "thousands of protesters" demonstrated. Marseille's port was blockaded by demonstrators for a second consecutive day. In Lyon, "hundreds of railway workers, students and others have taken to the tracks disrupting trains". In Normandy, "thousands" turned out in Rouen, Caen, Le Havre and Dieppe. In Rouen, riot police used tear gas against some protesters throwing stones, and in Rennes, used both tear gas and water cannons as "some masked protesters" erected barricades". In Nice, protesters converged on the city centre, before marching to the airport and forming a blockade.[123]

Yahoo! quoted local media that stated almost 10,000 were marching in Tours, where protesters blocked train tracks and caused disruption to train departures.[130] Smoke was observed rising from burning debris that blocked traffic on a Toulouse highway, as "wildcat strikes briefly blocked roads in other cities".[118] Police fired tear gas at protesters in Nantes,[120] where also "a group of activists stormed the administrative court",[131] and used water cannons in Rennes.

In Lorient, a local newspaper reported that projectiles were thrown into the yard of the police station, having "triggered a brief fire",[120] with claims that multiple police officers had been "violently attacked". A local prefecture office also "came under attack" in the town,[123] The Times claiming that activists "sought to storm a government building and to set fire to the town's police station".[131] Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin responded on Twitter: "The attacks on and defacing of the subprefecture and the police station in Lorient are unacceptable. Thoughts with the injured officers. These acts cannot go unpunished."[123]

The Independent reported that a "video on social media showed several trucks dumping tyres, rubbish and manure in front of council offices in several locations", and "[h]ighways were blocked with barriers of burning wood and tyres as protesters raised slogans".[119]

The Palais Rohan in Bordeaux was set on fire by protesters, affecting the front door, though the fire was put out promptly by firefighters.[132]


 
Strength of the police presence in Paris.

In the evening, Interior Minister Darmanin made a statement where he declared that there had been an attempt to kill police officers by some protesters. BBC News and France 24 claim he announced 123 police officers had been injured nationwide,[123][112] while an independent journalist said he claimed 149 had been injured in Paris alone.[133] In Paris, one officer was "dragged to safety while unconscious, as he and his colleagues came under fire from fireworks and other missiles. The officer appeared to have been hit on the head". In Rouen, a young woman was reported to have lost her thumb after hit by a 'flash ball' grenade used by police to try and disperse protesters – Damien Adam, Renaissance MP for the area, "says it's "clearly unacceptable" and he wants a police inquiry to find out what happened" – and police confirmed two officers were injured after missiles were thrown at them. LFI officials have "complained that six protesters had been hurt by police tear gas and stun grenades and wants to know what orders officers were given".[123]

Darmanin claimed over 80 people had been arrested so far.[123] Shortages of firefighters in the evening meant that local residents themselves had to put out fires themselves; Darmanin claimed 140 fires needed to be put out in Paris, with 50 still burning at the time (approximately 8:30pm GMT).[134][133]

In the afternoon, union heads Berger and Martinez spoke out. Berger appealed for non-violence, for the "respect of property and people", for "non-violent actions that don't handicap people's daily lives". Martinez claimed Macron was blamed for the actions of protesters and demonstrators, saying he had "thrown a can of petrol on the fire".[123] Hugh Schofield of BBC News said that unions and the left "are calling the day a success, with once again a large turn-out of people showing their rejection of Macron's pension bill".[123]

Further action

Impact on Charles III's state visit

On March 3, 2023, it was announced that King Charles III and Camilla, Queen Consort, would visit France between 26—29 March.[135] However, in the week leading up to the scheduled visit, many news organizations began to report that the King's visit could be disrupted by the ongoing protests. [136][111]

The 'optics' for the trip have been criticised. The author of a biography of the late Queen Elizabeth II, Stephen Clarke, said it was "very bad timing", and that while the people of France would "normally ... welcome a British king", "in this moment, people protesting are on high alert for any sign of privilege and wealth"; AP commented that "what was meant to be a show of bonhomie and friendship ... instead ... is being seen as an unnecessary display of hereditary privilege". He added that the King and Queen Consort's plans to attend a "lavish dinner at the former royal residence, the Versailles Palace", "does not look good", and "seems very 1789". AP clarified that the "lavish Versailles, once the dazzling center of royal Europe, is a potent symbol of social inequalities and excess".[137] The Telegraph reported that the banquet, intended to take place on 27 March, could be cancelled or moved.[138]

LBC said that demonstrators had "warned they would set up protests and blockades during the visit to Bordeaux and stop him getting the tram, which he had reportedly planned to do on the historic trip";[136] Sud Ouest reported that the intention was for the King and Queen Consort to arrive in Bordeaux by train and take a tram to the city centre.[111] A spokesperson for the moderate CFTC union said that it was very unlikely to happen as "[n]o drivers will want to drive him", and will be a logistical challenge due to any tram he takes needing protection at the "front and behind", compounded by the "risk of projectiles". Olivier Besancenot of the New Anticapitalist Party said "[w]e are going to greet [Charles] with a good old general strike".[136] A CGT representative announced that there would be "very significant actions on March 28, certainly big demonstrations and big blockades," with police reportedly "concerned that Macron's opponents will seek to hold a protest in the town near Paris during the banquet".[111]

EELV MP Sandrine Rousseau called for the trip to be cancelled, asking if "the priority [is] really to receive Charles III at Versailles? Something is taking place within French society... the priority is to go and talk to society which is rising up."[6][111]

On 23 March, AP reported how the CGT's members at Mobilier National (the institution in charge of providing flags, red carpets and furniture for public buildings) "would not help prepare a Sunday reception for the king upon his arrival in Paris"; in response, the Elysee Palace said "non-striking workers would set up the necessary accoutrements for the trip".[137] On 23 March, unions called for their tenth day of nationwide action for 28 March, coinciding with the last full day of the state visit.[123]

On 24 March, at the request of the French Government, the state visit was postponed.[139] Macron reportedly decided it would no longer be feasible or appropriate for the visit to take place once unions announced the tenth day of national walkouts on the 28 March, during the state visit. Eric Ciotti, leader of the Republicans said the cancellation brought "shame on our country", while Melenchon was of an opposing mood, "delighted" that the "meeting of kings at Versailles" had been broken up, and that "the English knew that France's interior minister was pathetic on security". The visit has been rescheduled for sometime in the summer, "when things calm down again".[140]

30 March

Reuters reported a new general strike was also scheduled for 30 March.[78]

General impact and analysis

Concerns over increasing violence

Multiple outlets, including media and unions, have grown concern over the increasing use of violence in the protests, particularly in the days since the government invoked Article 49.3, with comparisons made to the Gilets jaunes (Yellow Vests) protests of the first years of Macron's presidency. On 19 March, The Guardian commented that as "police brace[d] for a week of unpredictable, spontaneous protests in cities and small towns across France, the mood of anger was likened to the start of the gilets jaunes protests". [87] On 20 March, Reuters also voiced that the tone of the protests had deteriorated to, and were "reminiscent" to, that of the Yellow Vest protest in recent days.[103] Euronews, on 21 March, claimed that "government insiders and observers have raised fears that France is again heading for another bout of violent anti-government protests".[106] On 22 March, Reuters outlined that "[p]rotests against the bill have drawn huge crowds in rallies organised by unions since January", of which "[m]ost have been peaceful, but anger has mounted since the government pushed the bill through parliament without a vote last week"; "[t]he past six nights have seen fierce demonstrations across France with bins set ablaze and scuffles with police".[113]

France 24 commented that unions had been "united in coordinating their protests", but that "many expressed fears they could lose control of the protests as more radical demonstrators set the tone". Fabrice Coudour, a leading representative for the 'hard-left' CGT, commented that "tougher action ahead, more serious and further-reaching" was possible that could "escape our collective decision-making". Jean-Marie Pernot, a political scientist specialising in trade unions, said that a lack of "respect [for] any of the channels meant for the expression of dissent, it will find a way to express itself directly". One of the Yellow Vests' "prominent spokesmen", Jerome Rodrigues, spoke to protesters outside the National Assembly after the invoking of Article 49.3 on 17 March, that "the objective was now nothing less than "the defeat" of the president."[81]

Head of the UNSA trade union federation, Lauren Escure, admitted that "when there is this much anger and so many French people on the streets, the more radical elements take the floor", and that it was not something they would want, but was inevitable, and "will be entirely the government's fault," he told AFP. The heads of two 'moderate' unions, Cyril Chabanier of CFTC and Laurent Berger of CFDT, expressed that unions were concerned.[81] Cabanier said that an impression that "it is just violence that pays" was being created, and that "[t]here are some people who are very angry, [and] the anger leads to greater radicalisation and radicalisation unfortunately leads to violence".[5] Berger has been reported as having warned the government that protests could grow more violent if those protesting begin to feel that the Yellow Vests, in France 24's words, "achieved more with violence than established unions with their peaceful, mass demonstrations".[81] Berger told RMC radio, alongside his demand for the reforms to be "withdrawn", that his union "condemn[s] violence", but added "look at the anger. It's very strong, even among our ranks".[85]

On 19 March, The Guardian reported that – alongside the leader of the Republicans' office being vandalised – other MPs from the party were "receiving hundreds of threatening emails a day". Frédérique Meunier told BFMTV that "[i]t's as if tomorrow they want to decapitate us", and that the emails being received "amounted to harassment". The constituency offices of Renaissance MPs – the party from which Macron originates – were also targeted.[87] BBC News's Paris correspondent, Hugh Schofield, on 22 March, said that the protests in recent days had been "spectacular, sometimes, visually" but "not huge in terms of scale" and "mostly .. the work of very committed left-wingers, class-warrior types, who are leading the battle".[141] Natasha Butler of Al Jazeera said the violence in recent days was "sporadic".[142]

Waste collection strike

 
Rubbish piled up on a street corner in Paris on 16 March.

A strike by waste collectors began on 6 March, which included a blockade of the city's incinerators.[143] Originally set to last nine days, it was extended by another five on 15 March. As of 15 March, "bin lorries [were] grounded at depots and at least three waste incinerators in the Paris area [were] at a standstill".[144]

The impact of the waste workers strike has left thousands of tonnes of rubbish uncollected on the streets of Paris. On 17 March, it was estimated the amount was 10,000 tonnes, up from 7,600 earlier in the week. Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said that "strikers were being forced back under emergency powers designed to safeguard essential services", and from the morning of 17 March told RTL radio that "requisitioning is working and bins are being emptied", although this was disputed by an aide of Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo.[143] Hidalgo has maintained her support for the strikers despite efforts by government to break it, with the deputy mayor in charge of waste, Colombe Brossel, commenting that "any demand to force strikers back to work would be "an attack on the constitutional right to strike"."[144]

Paris' municipal waste collectors started its strike and blockade of the city's incinerators twelve days earlier; the proposed pension reforms would raise their retirement age from 57 to 59. Waste collection in Paris is split around half-and-half between them and private companies, who remained in operation with some taking contracts to operate in areas worst hit by the strike action; such as the ninth district, whose mayor, Delphine Burkli, suggested "calling in the army to clear the streets."[143]

Waste collection strikes also affected Antibes, Rennes and Le Havre.[144]

On 18 March, the mayor of Paris' 12th district, Emmanuelle Pierre-Marie, said that the priority was food waste in the streets – AP describing the "uncollected garbage" as having "become a visual and olfactory symbol of the actions to defeat the president's pension reform plan" – "because it is what brings pests to the surface" and that they "are extremely sensitive to the situation. As soon as we have a dumpster truck available, we give priority to the places most concerned, like food markets." It was claimed that police had "requisitioned garbage workers to clean up some neighborhoods".[85]

As of 19 March, Philippe Martinez from CGT had "urged" Paris collection workers to continue their now-two-week-long strike.[87]

Actions of police (behaviour; outcome of arrests)

Euronews reported that, of the 292 arrested after the protests on 16 March that "were taken into custody and presented to the public prosecutor's office, to receive a caution", only nine were "charged with actual offences", and so nearly 97% "were closed without any follow-up, or charges being pressed". As well, they have claimed that many who just happened to be passing by protesters or demonstrators were arrested and taken into custody, some without a "clear reason why", with French media reporting two Austrian children on a school trip were taken into custody after the 16 March protests, only released following intervention by the Austrian Embassy. On 17 March, 60 people were taken into custody, with 34 cases closed, 21 with another result (such as a caution or warning), with just five ending up at trial. Coline Bouillon, a lawyer who represented some demonstrators, told Euronews that a large group of people who had been at a conference were "rounded up", police justifying the arrests for their "participation in a group with a view to preparing violence", or "concealing their faces"; they were remanded in custody for one to two days; she, among a group of lawyers, intend to "file a collective complaint against the police for "arbitrary detention" and "obstruction of the freedom to demonstrate"."[145]

Such "arbitrary police custody", "mass-arrest", tactics have been accused – by politicians, judges and lawyers alike – of being utilised "simply to frustrate the protest movement", it being perceived, through precedent (such as in the gilet jaunes protests), as a "repression of the social movement". This view was shared by a judges' union, the Syndicat de la Magistrature (SM), with Raphaël Kempf, a French lawyer in judiciary repression methods, commenting that it was the first time the government had used "criminal law to dissuade demonstrators from demonstrating and exercising their freedom," said Raphaël Kempf, a French lawyer specialising in judiciary repression methods". Fabien Jobard, research director at France's National Scientific Research Centre CNRS, said that a "judicialisation of policing" has taken place over the past 15 years, with specific reference to a 2010 law that created the offence of "participation in a group with a view to committing violence or damage"; its original remit of mitigating against 'gang violence' and at sporting venues has been expanded to protests and demonstrations.[145]

According to Le Monde critics are expressing concerns over the "violent confrontations and the systematic use of arrests" at rallies.[146]

On 20 March, on television, police were seen momentarily firing tear gas and rushing at demonstrators in several cities, with special motorbike officers thrusting through protesters, which made Clément Voule, the UN Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Association, respond on Twitter by stating that officers should avoid using disproportionate force.[147]

On 21 March, an Interior Ministry spokesperson commented that "there are no unjustified arrests", and people are questioned for "offences which, in our eyes, are constituted" and "48 hours (of police custody) to try to process the offence is short". AFP was told by a senior police source that instructions have not been given to conduct mass arrests, adding "when high-risk profiles are arrested, they are no longer agitating others"; another officer added that with such a high number of arrests, the "manoeuvre is risky", as they "expose the workforce, monopolise officers" and "risk radicalising the demonstrators".[145]

On 21 March, The Guardian reported that the "police watchdog is investigating allegations that four young women in Nantes were sexually assaulted during police controls at a demonstration last week".[110] On 23 March, British journalist Lewis Goodall, covering the demonstrations in Paris, reported that police were "on pretty brutal form" – stating a member of his team had been targeted by police despite asserting they were press – and were also throwing their stun grenades with "abandon".[148][149] During the protests of the 23 March, hundreds of officers were injured across France. However, as BBC News wrote, protesters were also injured by police stun grenades, and the Council of Europe declared that there was no justification for "excessive force" by authorities.[140]

Political ramifications

Macron's proposal to raise the retirement age from 62 to 64 has been compared to former President Nicholas Sarkozy's 2010 reform that raised the retirement age from 60 to 62, which also led to massive strikes and protests across France.[150][151] Public opinion polling analysis has shown that Sarkozy's push for reform played a role in driving voters to both the Socialist Party and the far-right National Front in the 2012 presidential election.[152]

One author of a paper in academic journal West European Politics tweeted a screenshot of the results of a study that showed executive approval has historically fallen after no-confidence votes, and linked it to what the impact of invoking Article 49.3 could be.[153] The Guardian touched on political dissatisfaction, comparing the protests to that of the gilet jaunes, which "were initially against fuel tax rises but evolved to encompass a wider lack of trust in the political system".[87] Antoine Bristielle, from the Fondation Jean-Jaures think tank, opined that the invoking of Article 49.3 could be "perceived as a symbol of brutality" and could "erode support both for the government and democratic institutions".[17]

Hypothetical alternatives

Many[citation needed] theorised that in the aftermath of the pension reforms controversy, Macron would fire Prime Minister Borne, such as "to try and reset his image",[91] while prominent figures of opposition parties suggested using a referendum, and put the decision to implement the reforms to voters.[5]

Prior to the no-confidence votes (which failed and thus the pension reforms entered into law), France 24 outlined the alternatives. They contended that the votes were likely to fail, even the one tabled by the centrist group LIOT which was most likely to attract transpartisan support – unless enough members of the Republicans broke ranks and voted in favour (which did not happen) – and the potential consequence of the National Assembly being dissolved and fresh elections being triggered (which Macron has at his disposal regardless) was also unlikely. Failure of the no-confidence votes leaves attempts to hold a referendum as one other option, known as a référendum d'initiative partagée (a shared-initiative referendum, or RIP); it requires the support of one-fifth of both the National Assembly and Senate, as well as the signatures of a tenth of the electorate, which need to be collected within nine months. However, it was pointed out that the triggering of an 'RIP' would need to have been done "before the enactment of the law"; yet, according to Stéphane Peu, deputy of the Communist Party Deputy, NUPES has had the support of the necessary 185 National Assembly members since 14 March, two days before the invoking of Article 49.3; he said his bill would include language that stated "the retirement age cannot exceed 62".[101] The Times, on 19 March, wrote that the process being started would lead to the pension reforms being unable to be introduced until the referendum took place, "thwarting Macron's plans to start bringing in the changes from September and casting a shadow over the government's other work."[5]

Furthermore, it was announced that members of NUPES would appeal to the Constitutional Council; a deputy of the LIOT group said on 14 March that had the bill passed by vote in the National Assembly, "several appeals" would have been made. France 24 said that NUPES would "argue that the reform, which was inserted into the social security budget, is a legislative rider, since the text addresses more than just finances", and that "[l]eft-wing deputies intend to rely on the opinion of France's Conseil d'État (Council of State), which had warned the government of a risk that certain measures in its pension reform plan, as well as the plan's lack of clear calculations, were unconstitutional".[101]

On 21 March, Macron declared he would not dissolve the National Assembly or call a referendum on the reforms.[106]

International reaction

Iran condemned what it called France's repression of protests. Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian said "We call on the French government to respect human rights" and further added "instead of creating chaos in other countries, listen to the voice of your people and avoid violence against them."[154][155] Elon Musk announced his support for the reforms.[156]

Dimitris Koutsoubas, the General Secretary of the Communist Party of Greece attended a rally in Paris on 23 March; in a statement from Bastille Square, expressing his solidarity with the "struggle of the French people ... against anti-labor policies, against the anti-popular choices" utilised by both the French and the Greek governments in order to ensure the working people "finally win" and "pave the way for their own interests and not the interests and profits of the few." The International Anthem was played over loudspeakers, with the railway workers and trade unionists being spoken to offering him a "Friends of the Paris Commune" handkerchief.[157] The British monarch King Charles and the Queen Consort postponed their state visit to France amid violent widespread protests.[158]

See also

References

  1. ^ Clair, Alice; Guillot, Julien (2 February 2023). "Réforme des retraites : suivez l'ampleur de la mobilisation, manifestation après manifestation" [Retirement Reform: follow the size of the mobilisation, protest after protest]. Libération (in French). from the original on 22 March 2023. Retrieved 21 March 2023.
  2. ^ a b c d "President Macron pushes back presentation of French pension overhaul to January". France24. AFP. 12 December 2022. from the original on 19 March 2023. Retrieved 18 March 2023.
  3. ^ a b c Ataman, Joseph (18 March 2023). "French workers may have to retire at 64 and many are in uproar. Here's why". CNN. from the original on 17 March 2023. Retrieved 18 March 2023.
  4. ^ a b c d e Breeden, Aurelien (20 March 2023). "Why So Many People in France Are Protesting Over Pensions". The New York Times. Paris. from the original on 19 March 2023. Retrieved 20 March 2023.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Conradi, Peter (19 March 2023). "After days of violent protests, inside Macron's battle to keep France working". The Times. Paris. from the original on 20 March 2023. Retrieved 20 March 2023.
  6. ^ a b c d e Kirby, Paul (22 March 2023). "French reforms: Macron refuses to give way as pension protests escalate". BBC News. from the original on 22 March 2023. Retrieved 22 March 2023.
  7. ^ a b "France's Macron says pension reform will be carried out in 2023". France24. Reuters. 31 December 2022. from the original on 23 January 2023. Retrieved 18 March 2023.
  8. ^ a b c "'Live longer, work longer': Macron vows to raise French retirement age to 65". France24. AP. 27 October 2022. from the original on 19 March 2023. Retrieved 18 March 2023.
  9. ^ a b c d Chrisafis, Angelique (16 March 2023). "Why are pensions such a political flashpoint in France?". The Guardian. Paris. from the original on 21 March 2023. Retrieved 22 March 2023.
  10. ^ a b Keay, Lara (17 March 2023). "How does France's pension age compare to other countries – and why has it sparked protests?". Sky News. from the original on 17 March 2023. Retrieved 18 March 2023.
  11. ^ a b c d Van Ossel, Julie (17 March 2023). "Not just about retiring at 64: What you may have missed in the French pension reform". Euronews. from the original on 17 March 2023. Retrieved 18 March 2023.
  12. ^ "Retirement age hike to 65 'not set in stone' says French PM ahead of crunch union talks". France24. AFP. 3 January 2023. from the original on 19 March 2023. Retrieved 18 March 2023.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g . France24. 20 March 2023. Archived from the original on 21 March 2023. Retrieved 21 March 2023.
  14. ^ a b Willsher, Kim (14 March 2023). "France faces another day of strikes ahead of key vote on pension reforms". The Guardian. Paris. from the original on 21 March 2023. Retrieved 22 March 2023.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Chrisafis, Angelique (16 March 2023). "Macron uses special powers to force through plan to raise pension age". The Guardian. Paris. from the original on 17 March 2023. Retrieved 22 March 2023.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h . France24. FRANCE 24 with Reuters, AFP. 19 March 2023. Archived from the original on 19 March 2023. Retrieved 19 March 2023.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h Dodman, Benjamin (17 March 2023). "Bitter pension battle turns to democratic crisis as Macron bypasses French parliament". France24. from the original on 17 March 2023. Retrieved 18 March 2023.
  18. ^ Meyerson, Harold (20 March 2023). "Democracy Is in the Streets". The American Prospect. from the original on 21 March 2023. Retrieved 22 March 2023.
  19. ^ Lichfield, John (18 March 2023). "Has Emmanuel Macron broken France?". POLITICO. from the original on 18 March 2023. Retrieved 19 March 2023.
  20. ^ a b Barigazzi, Jacopo (19 March 2023). "Macron pays high price in popularity over pension reform, survey shows". POLITICO. from the original on 19 March 2023. Retrieved 19 March 2023.
  21. ^ a b c d . Al Jazeera. 18 March 2023. Archived from the original on 19 March 2023. Retrieved 18 March 2023.
  22. ^ a b c d Masih, Niha; Noack, Rick; Parker, Claire (18 March 2023). . The Washington Post. Archived from the original on 18 March 2023. Retrieved 18 March 2023.
  23. ^ a b Reid, Jenni (20 March 2023). . CNBC. Archived from the original on 20 March 2023. Retrieved 20 March 2023.
  24. ^ a b c Radford, Antoinette; Andersson, Jasmine (21 March 2023). . BBC News. Archived from the original on 21 March 2023. Retrieved 21 March 2023.
  25. ^ a b "RETRAITES: LA CGT ANNONCE 2,8 MILLIONS DE MANIFESTANTS EN FRANCE, 1,272 MILLION SELON LA POLICE" [PENSIONS: THE CGT ANNOUNCES 2.8 MILLION DEMONSTRATORS IN FRANCE, 1.272 MILLION ACCORDING TO THE POLICE]. BFM (in French). from the original on 31 January 2023. Retrieved 31 January 2023.
  26. ^ a b Houdayer, Géraldine (19 January 2023). "Réforme des retraites: la CGT annonce "plus de 2 millions" de manifestants, le gouvernement 1,12 million" [Pension reform: the CGT announces "more than 2 million" demonstrators, the government [announces] 1.12 million]. France Bleu. from the original on 20 January 2023.
  27. ^ a b c "France: Over 1 million march against raising retirement age". AP NEWS. 19 January 2023. from the original on 23 January 2023. Retrieved 23 January 2023.
  28. ^ a b c Ataman, Joseph; Lacroix, Marguerite; Ziady, Hanna (19 January 2023). "Striking French workers lead 1 million people in protest over plans to raise retirement age | CNN Business". CNN. from the original on 23 January 2023. Retrieved 23 January 2023.
  29. ^ "Why is the French pension age so low?". The Economist. 31 January 2023. from the original on 15 March 2023. Retrieved 16 March 2023.
  30. ^ "Grève du 19 janvier: 80.000 manifestants selon la police, contre 400.000 pour la CGT" [Strike on 19 January: 80,000 demonstrators according to the police, against 400,000 according to the CGT]. BFMTV. 19 January 2023. from the original on 20 January 2023. Retrieved 20 January 2023.
  31. ^ Canetto, Sidonie (19 January 2023). "Grève contre la réforme des retraites : forte mobilisation à Marseille, Avignon et Arles" [Strike against pension reform: strong mobilisation in Marseille, Avignon and Arles]. France 3 Provence-Alpes. from the original on 20 January 2023. Retrieved 20 January 2023.
  32. ^ Ansquer, Mathilde; Grolée, Laurent; Glotin, Sophie (19 January 2023). "Grève contre la réforme des retraites : très forte mobilisation dans les Bouches-du-Rhône et le Var" [Strike against pension reform: very strong mobilisation in the Bouches-du-Rhône and the Var]. France Bleu Provence. from the original on 20 January 2023. Retrieved 20 January 2023.
  33. ^ Barletta, Julien (19 January 2023). "Marée humaine à Lyon contre la réforme des retraites" [Protest march against pension reform in Lyon]. Lyon Capitale. from the original on 19 January 2023. Retrieved 20 January 2023.
  34. ^ Vau, Alexandre (19 January 2023). "Entre 36.000 et 50.000 personnes ont manifesté contre la réforme des retraites à Toulouse" [Between 36,000 and 50,000 people demonstrated against pension reform in Toulouse]. France Bleu Occitanie. from the original on 20 January 2023. Retrieved 20 January 2023.
  35. ^ #France : Massive demonstration against the pension reform in #Toulouse • 19 January 2023 on YouTube
  36. ^ Marabeuf, Corentin; Ruiz, Benoît; Langlois, Marine (19 January 2023). "Grève du 19 janvier: mobilisation très importante à Nice, des milliers de participants" [Strike of 19 January: very important mobilisation in Nice, thousands of participants]. BFM Côte d'Azur. from the original on 20 January 2023. Retrieved 20 January 2023.
  37. ^ "Grève contre la réforme des retraites: les images de l'énorme manifestation niçoise" [Strike against pension reform: pictures of the huge demonstration in Nice]. Nice-Matin. 19 January 2023. from the original on 20 January 2023. Retrieved 20 January 2023.
  38. ^ Aguilé, Camille (19 January 2023). "VIDÉO. Grève du 19 janvier contre la réforme des retraites. Une mobilisation de grande ampleur en Pays de la Loire" [VIDEO. 19 January strike against pension reform. A large-scale mobilisation in the Pays de la Loire]. France 3 Pays de la Loire. from the original on 19 January 2023. Retrieved 20 January 2023.
  39. ^ "Grève du 19 janvier : jusqu'à 15 000 personnes ont défilé d'Antigone à la Comédie à Montpellier" [Strike on 19 January: up to 15,000 people marched from Antigone to Comédie in Montpellier]. Midi Libre. 19 January 2023. from the original on 19 January 2023. Retrieved 20 January 2023.
  40. ^ Guiomard, Morgane (19 January 2023). "VIDÉO – Entre 15.000 et 25.000 personnes à la manifestation contre la réforme des retraites à Montpellier" [VIDEO - Between 15,000 and 25,000 people at the demonstration against pension reform in Montpellier]. France Bleu Hérault. from the original on 20 January 2023. Retrieved 20 January 2023.
  41. ^ "Réforme des retraites : " Je n'ai jamais vu une manifestation sociale aussi grande à Strasbourg "" [Pension reform: "I have never seen such a large social demonstration in Strasbourg"]. Rue89. 19 January 2023. from the original on 19 January 2023. Retrieved 20 January 2023.
  42. ^ Près de 20000 personnes manifestent contre la réforme des retraites à Strasbourg. on YouTube
  43. ^ Barraux, Tristan (19 January 2023). "Réforme des retraites : à Bordeaux 60.000 manifestants selon les syndicats, 16.000 selon la préfecture" [Pension reform: 60,000 demonstrators in Bordeaux according to the unions, 16,000 according to the prefecture]. France Bleu Gironde. from the original on 20 January 2023. Retrieved 20 January 2023.
  44. ^ "Une mobilisation d'ampleur à Bordeaux pour la manifestation contre la réforme des retraites" [A large-scale mobilisation in Bordeaux for the demonstration against the pension reform]. Rue89. 19 January 2023. from the original on 20 January 2023. Retrieved 20 January 2023.
  45. ^ Mullet, Adeline; Lecluyse, Frédérick (19 January 2023). "Réforme des retraites: à Lille, au moins 30 000 personnes dans un cortège de plus de 3 km" [Pension reform: in Lille, at least 30,000 people in a march of over 3 km]. La Voix du Nord. from the original on 20 January 2023. Retrieved 20 January 2023.
  46. ^ ""Marche pour nos retraites" : qui appelle à manifester ce samedi 21 janvier à Paris ?" ["March for our pensions": who is calling for a demonstration this Saturday 21 January in Paris?]. BFMTV. 21 January 2023. from the original on 21 January 2023. Retrieved 21 January 2023.
  47. ^ Menuge, Ewen (21 January 2023). "Côtes-d'Armor. Manifestation à Dinan : " Ne pas laisser retomber la pression "" [Côtes-d'Armor. Demonstration in Dinan: "Keep up the pressure"]. Ouest-France. from the original on 21 January 2023. Retrieved 21 January 2023.
  48. ^ Mylle, Juliette (21 January 2023). "Réforme des retraites : près de 200 manifestants dans les rues de Limoges ce samedi" [Pension reform: nearly 200 demonstrators in the streets of Limoges this Saturday]. France Bleu Limousin. from the original on 21 January 2023. Retrieved 21 January 2023.
  49. ^ "Ce samedi, deuxième manifestation de la semaine contre la réforme des retraites à Lyon" [This Saturday, second demonstration of the week against the pension reform in Lyon]. LyonMag. 21 January 2023. from the original on 21 January 2023. Retrieved 21 January 2023.
  50. ^ Libert, Lucien; Hamaide, Sybille De La (31 January 2023). "France hit by second nationwide strike against pension reform". Reuters. from the original on 31 January 2023. Retrieved 31 January 2023.
  51. ^ Clair, Alice; Guillot, Julien (2 February 2023). "Réforme des retraites : suivez l'ampleur de la mobilisation, manifestation après manifestation" [Retirement Reform: follow the size of the mobilisation, protest after protest]. Libération (in French). from the original on 22 March 2023. Retrieved 9 February 2023.
  52. ^ Villechenon, Anna; Favier, Sandra; L'Hénoret, Solène (11 February 2023). "Manifestations du 11 février, en direct : entre 963 000 et 2,5 millions de personnes ont manifesté samedi en France" [11 February Protests: between 963,000 and 2,5 millions of people protested Saturday in France]. Le Monde (in French). from the original on 11 February 2023. Retrieved 11 February 2023.
  53. ^ "New pension strikes grip France as MPs wage legislative battle". France 24. 16 February 2023. from the original on 20 February 2023. Retrieved 20 February 2023.
  54. ^ "France pension protests: Fuel deliveries blocked by strikers". BBC. 7 March 2023. from the original on 7 March 2023. Retrieved 7 March 2023.
  55. ^ "French protesters take to the streets to rally against Macron's pension plan". France 24. 11 March 2023. from the original on 17 March 2023. Retrieved 17 March 2023.
  56. ^ "French Senate advances Macron's pension reform plan as strikes continue". France 24. 12 March 2023. from the original on 17 March 2023. Retrieved 17 March 2023.
  57. ^ a b c d e f Sylvie Corbet, Associated Press; Thomas Adamson (15 March 2023). . PBS. Paris. Archived from the original on 17 March 2023. Retrieved 17 March 2023.
  58. ^ a b c d e "Nationwide protests ahead of final votes on French pension reform". France24. 15 March 2023. from the original on 17 March 2023. Retrieved 17 March 2023.
  59. ^ Décodeurs, Les (15 March 2023). "Pension reform protests: Map of the March 15 demonstrations across France". Le Monde. from the original on 17 March 2023. Retrieved 17 March 2023.
  60. ^ Méheut, Constant; Porter, Catherine; Breeden, Aurelien; Nouvian, Tom (15 March 2023). "French Protesters Take to Streets in Last Angry Push Before Vote on Pension Bill". The New York Times. from the original on 17 March 2023. Retrieved 17 March 2023.
  61. ^ a b c d e "France erupts in strikes and protests over pension age rise – in pictures". The Guardian. 17 March 2023. from the original on 22 March 2023. Retrieved 22 March 2023.
  62. ^ a b c d Schofield, Hugh; Plummer, Robert (16 March 2023). . BBC News. Paris, London. Archived from the original on 17 March 2023. Retrieved 17 March 2023.
  63. ^ a b c Jacinto, Leela (16 March 2023). . France24. Archived from the original on 17 March 2023. Retrieved 17 March 2023.
  64. ^ a b Chrisafis, Angelique (16 March 2023). . The Guardian. Paris. Archived from the original on 17 March 2023. Retrieved 17 March 2023.
  65. ^ Ataman, Joseph; Laborie, Aurore; Guy, Jack (16 March 2023). . CNN. Archived from the original on 17 March 2023. Retrieved 17 March 2023.
  66. ^ a b c Weber, Peter (20 March 2023). "Is France 'on the edge of civil unrest'?". The Week. from the original on 20 March 2023. Retrieved 20 March 2023.
  67. ^ a b c d . France24. 16 March 2023. Archived from the original on 17 March 2023. Retrieved 17 March 2023.
  68. ^ Corbet, Sylvie; Ganley, Elaine (16 March 2023). "France's Macron skirts parliament to force through unpopular retirement reform". Associated Press. from the original on 17 March 2023. Retrieved 17 March 2023.
  69. ^ a b c d The Associated Press (16 March 2023). . CBC. Reuters. Archived from the original on 16 March 2023. Retrieved 17 March 2023.
  70. ^ a b c d e f g . France24. FRANCE 24 with AFP, AP and REUTERS. 17 March 2023. Archived from the original on 18 March 2023. Retrieved 18 March 2023.
  71. ^ De Clercq, GV (17 March 2023). Nomiyama, Chizu (ed.). "Police fire tear gas at spontaneous anti-pension bill protest in Paris". Reuters. Reporting by Antony Paone. Paris. from the original on 17 March 2023. Retrieved 18 March 2023.
  72. ^ a b c d "French pension reform: Angry protesters assemble in Paris after government bypasses vote". Le Monde. Le Monde with Agence France-Presse (AFP). 17 March 2023 [16 March 2023]. from the original on 17 March 2023. Retrieved 17 March 2023.
  73. ^ a b c d . TheJournal.ie. 16 March 2023. Archived from the original on 17 March 2023. Retrieved 17 March 2023.
  74. ^ a b c d e f Chrisafis, Angelique (17 March 2023). "French anger spreads after Macron forces pension age rise". The Guardian. Paris. from the original on 21 March 2023. Retrieved 22 March 2023.
  75. ^ Lanot, Clément [@ClementLanot] (16 March 2023). "🔴 ALERTE – Nombreuses barricades en feu dans les rues de #Paris : les incidents s'étendent dans la capitale. #ReformesDesRetraites" (Tweet) (in French) – via Twitter.
  76. ^ Lanot, Clément [@ClementLanot] (17 March 2023). "🔴 Un énorme feu est allumé sur la #Concorde à #Paris. « Taxez les riches ! » crie la foule" (Tweet) (in French) – via Twitter.
  77. ^ Lanot, Clément [@ClementLanot] (17 March 2023). (Tweet) (in French). Archived from the original on 18 March 2023. Retrieved 18 March 2023 – via Twitter.
  78. ^ a b c Foroudi, Layli; Ausloos, Manuel (17 March 2023). "Police clash with protesters at Paris demonstration against pension overhaul". Reuters. Paris. from the original on 18 March 2023. Retrieved 18 March 2023.
  79. ^ a b c d e f g h Lynch, Niamh (17 March 2023). "French protests: Violence erupts in Paris as police clash with protesters at Place de la Concorde". Sky News. from the original on 18 March 2023. Retrieved 18 March 2023.
  80. ^ a b c Armstrong, Kathryn (18 March 2023). . BBC News. London. Archived from the original on 18 March 2023. Retrieved 18 March 2023.
  81. ^ a b c d e f g . France24. FRANCE 24 with AFP. 18 March 2023. Archived from the original on 18 March 2023. Retrieved 20 March 2023.
  82. ^ a b c d e f g h i . DW. AFP, AP, Reuters. 18 March 2023. Archived from the original on 20 March 2023. Retrieved 20 March 2023.
  83. ^ a b c d . France24. AFP. 18 March 2023. Archived from the original on 20 March 2023. Retrieved 20 March 2023.
  84. ^ a b De Lorenzo, Daniela (18 March 2023). "Paris police ban protest rallies in city's hotspots". POLITICO. from the original on 19 March 2023. Retrieved 19 March 2023.
  85. ^ a b c d e f g Adamson, Thomas; Garriga, Nicolas (18 March 2023). "French protesters march past garbage piles, resisting Macron". AP. Contribution by Jade le Deley. Paris. from the original on 22 March 2023. Retrieved 22 March 2023.
  86. ^ a b c Vidalon, Dominique; Ausloos, Manuel (18 March 2023). Holmes, David; Graff, Peter; Wallis, Daniel (eds.). . Reuters. Reporting by Dominique Vidalon, Gilles Guillaume and Forrest Crellin. Paris. Archived from the original on 19 March 2023. Retrieved 19 March 2023.
  87. ^ a b c d e f g h i Chrisafis, Angelique (19 March 2023). . The Guardian. Paris. Archived from the original on 20 March 2023. Retrieved 20 March 2023.
  88. ^ a b c d Struna, Hugo (20 March 2023). . Euractiv. Archived from the original on 20 March 2023. Retrieved 20 March 2023.
  89. ^ Parreira, Ricardo [@RicardParreir] (19 March 2023). "Le feu populaire est lancé à la pleine !!! Quelle magie !" (Tweet) (in French) – via Twitter.
  90. ^ a b c "Vandals attack French politician's office over pensions row". AP. Paris. 19 March 2023. from the original on 19 March 2023. Retrieved 20 March 2023.
  91. ^ a b "French government faces make-or-break vote after pension reform uproar". France24. AFP. 20 March 2023. from the original on 20 March 2023. Retrieved 20 March 2023.
  92. ^ Whitehead, Joanna (20 March 2023). . The Independent. Archived from the original on 20 March 2023. Retrieved 20 March 2023.
  93. ^ a b @AvicenCroco via Storyful (20 March 2023). "Roads Blocked in Rennes as Protests Against Pension Reforms Continue in France". Yahoo! News UK. from the original on 20 March 2023. Retrieved 20 March 2023.
  94. ^ "French police face off with protesters over pensions". Yahoo! Sports UK. Reuters. 20 March 2023. from the original on 20 March 2023. Retrieved 20 March 2023.
  95. ^ a b Préfet de Bretagne et d'Ille-et-Vilaine [@bretagnegouv] (20 March 2023). "#Manifestation | 🟢 Actualisation à 11h50. La circulation reprend progressivement à #Rennes. 🟢 Tous les points de blocages sont levés 🟠 Porte de Saint-Malo : chaussée endommagée. La vitesse est limitée à 70Km/h[.] Le préfet souligne la parfaite réactivité des services engagés" (Tweet) (in French) – via Twitter.
  96. ^ "Watch: Pension protesters set fires on Rennes ring road". Euronews. 20 March 2023. from the original on 20 March 2023. Retrieved 20 March 2023.
  97. ^ a b c d . Crisis24. 20 March 2023. Archived from the original on 20 March 2023. Retrieved 20 March 2023.
  98. ^ a b c d e Mawad, Dalal; Briscoe, Oliver; Liakos, Chris; Guy, Jack (20 March 2023). "France's government survives no-confidence votes and controversial pension reforms will move ahead". CNN. Contributions by Pierre Bairin and Christian Edwards. from the original on 21 March 2023. Retrieved 21 March 2023.
  99. ^ a b c d Carey, Alexis (23 March 2023). "France 'burning' as violent pension reform protests cause fuel shortages, mass arrests". News.com.au. Retrieved 23 March 2023.
  100. ^ a b c d Cessac, Marjorie (21 March 2023). "Fears of petrol shortages resurface as French refineries strike against pension reform". Le Monde. from the original on 22 March 2023. Retrieved 23 March 2023.
  101. ^ a b c d Houeix, Romain (18 March 2023). . France24. Archived from the original on 18 March 2023. Retrieved 18 March 2023.
  102. ^ Élections 202(2) [@2022Elections] (20 March 2023). "🔴⚡️ Résultats du vote sur la motion de censure : ✅ POUR : 278 La motion n'est pas adoptée à 9 voix près. #MotionDeCensureTransPartisane" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  103. ^ a b c d e f g Pineau, Elizabeth; Foroudi, Layli (20 March 2023). "Protesters set rubbish on fire as French govt barely survives no-confidence vote". Reuters. Reporting by Lincoln Feast. from the original on 20 March 2023. Retrieved 20 March 2023.
  104. ^ World Elects [@ElectsWorld] (20 March 2023). "The motion of no confidence proposed by the LIOT group against the Government of Prime Minister Borne failed. In Favour: -RN: 88 out of 88 -FI: 74/74 -PS: 31/31 -EELV: 22/22 -GDR (PCF): 22/22 -LR: 19/61 -LIOT: 18/20 -Others: 4/5 In favour: 278 287 were needed" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  105. ^ Dodman, Benjamin [@bendodman] (20 March 2023). ""In the end, there is a vote," says Prime Minister Borne. Her govt will seek to spin this no-confidence vote, which it is likely to survive, as granting democratic legitimacy to the pension reform (which would otherwise have been defeated in parliament)" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  106. ^ a b c d e f g Armstrong, Mark (21 March 2023). "Pension protests continue across France as President Macron refuses to back down". Euronews. with AFP. from the original on 21 March 2023. Retrieved 21 March 2023.
  107. ^ a b c d e f g h Corbet, Sylvie (21 March 2023). "French protests drag on after Macron's pension plan push". AP. from the original on 21 March 2023. Retrieved 21 March 2023.
  108. ^ a b c d Pineau, Elizabeth; Melander, Ingrid (21 March 2023). . Reuters. Reporting by Elizabeth Pineau, John Irish, Sudip Kar-Gupta, Noemie Olive, Yiming Woo; Writing by Ingrid Melander; Editing by Christina Fincher. Archived from the original on 21 March 2023. Retrieved 21 March 2023.
  109. ^ TRT World and agencies (21 March 2023). "Protests continue across France after Macron's pension plan push". TRT World. from the original on 21 March 2023. Retrieved 22 March 2023.
  110. ^ a b c Chrisafis, Angelique (21 March 2023). "'Anger is growing': protests and strikes spread across France over pensions reform". The Guardian. Ivry-sur-Seine. from the original on 21 March 2023. Retrieved 22 March 2023.
  111. ^ a b c d e Sage, Adam (21 March 2023). "King's state visit to France will be hit by strikes, vow protesters". The Times. Paris. from the original on 22 March 2023. Retrieved 22 March 2023.
  112. ^ a b c Dodman, Benjamin (23 March 2023). "'Democracy at stake': French protesters vent fury at Macron over pension push". France24. from the original on 23 March 2023. Retrieved 24 March 2023.
  113. ^ a b c Pineau, Elizabeth; Rossignol, Pascal (22 March 2023). "Macron stands firm on pension bill as protests escalate". Reuters. Reporting by Benoit Van Overstraeten, Jean-Stephane Brosse, Dominique Vidalon, Elizabeth Pineau, John Irish, Louise Dalmasso, Yiming Woo, Ardee Napolitano, Geert de Clercq, Eric Gaillard; Writing by Ingrid Melander; Editing by Christina Fincher, William Maclean. from the original on 22 March 2023. Retrieved 23 March 2023.
  114. ^ "French unions plan more strikes against pension reform on March 23". Reuters. 16 March 2023. from the original on 19 March 2023. Retrieved 19 March 2023.
  115. ^ "🔴 Live: More than 149 police injured, 172 people arrested in French pension protests". France 24. 23 March 2023. from the original on 24 March 2023. Retrieved 24 March 2023.
  116. ^ a b c d . TheConnexion. 23 March 2023. Archived from the original on 23 March 2023. Retrieved 23 March 2023.
  117. ^ a b c . ITV News. 23 March 2023. Archived from the original on 23 March 2023. Retrieved 23 March 2023.
  118. ^ a b . Al Jazeera. 23 March 2023. Archived from the original on 23 March 2023. Retrieved 23 March 2023.
  119. ^ a b c Sharma, Shweta (23 March 2023). . The Independent. Archived from the original on 23 March 2023. Retrieved 23 March 2023.
  120. ^ a b c d Libert, Lucian; Mahe, Stephane (23 March 2023). . Reuters. Reporting by Dominique Vidalon, Forrest Crellin, John Irish, Sudip Kar-Gupta, Lucien Libert, Stephane Mahe, Eric Gaillard, Bertrand Boucey, Marc Leras, Benoit van Overstraeten; Writing by Ingrid Melander; Editing by Christina Fincher and Angus MacSwan. Paris. Archived from the original on 23 March 2023. Retrieved 23 March 2023.
  121. ^ a b Corbet, Sylvie; Turnbull, Alexander (23 March 2023). . HuffPost. AP Journalist Nicolas Garriga in Paris contributed to the story. Paris. Archived from the original on 23 March 2023. Retrieved 23 March 2023.
  122. ^ "Dépôts pétroliers, routes, trains : nouvelles actions de blocage contre la réforme des retraites". France 24 (in French). 23 March 2023. from the original on 24 March 2023. Retrieved 24 March 2023.
  123. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Various (23 March 2023). "Fresh protests in France to clash with King's state visit". BBC News. from the original on 23 March 2023. Retrieved 23 March 2023.
  124. ^ "Réforme des retraites : 1,089 million de manifestants en France selon l'Intérieur, record dans plusieurs grandes villes". 23 March 2023. from the original on 24 March 2023. Retrieved 24 March 2023.
  125. ^ Goodall, Lewis [@lewis_goodall] (23 March 2023). "Posters lining the protest route depicting Macron as Louis XVI. One person tells us "the people win, or Macron wins. It's that simple."" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  126. ^ Goodall, Lewis [@lewis_goodall] (23 March 2023). "Heavily armed riot police as far as the eye can see in central Paris" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  127. ^ Goodall, Lewis [@lewis_goodall] (23 March 2023). "The sheer magnitude, the number of people Macron has motivated to turn out on the streets of Paris is extraordinary. The main demonstration route is full- they're now filing onto every side street" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  128. ^ Goodall, Lewis [@lewis_goodall] (23 March 2023). "CGT Union says more than 800,000 protesters have taken to the streets of Paris- the most significant action against Macron since the start of this crisis" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  129. ^ Goodall, Lewis [@lewis_goodall] (23 March 2023). "French networks saying 14 people have been arrested so far" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  130. ^ "Protesters Block Train Tracks in Tours on Day of French Strikes". Yahoo! Sport. 23 March 2023. from the original on 24 March 2023. Retrieved 23 March 2023.
  131. ^ a b Bremner, Charles; Sage, Adam (23 March 2023). . The Times. Paris. Archived from the original on 23 March 2023. Retrieved 23 March 2023.
  132. ^ "Bordeaux town hall set on fire in France pension protests". BBC News. 23 March 2023. from the original on 23 March 2023. Retrieved 23 March 2023.
  133. ^ a b Goodall, Lewis [@lewis_goodall] (23 March 2023). "149 police officers have been injured in Paris tonight. 140 fires have had to be put out. 50 are still burning in the capital. Says some of those who came "to kill" are from "the extreme left."" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  134. ^ Goodall, Lewis [@lewis_goodall] (23 March 2023). "1Local Parisians tell us there haven't been enough firefighters. People bringing hoses, buckets, saucepans full of water out of their apartments to douse flames until fire service arrives. Smoke across central Paris" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  135. ^ Coughlan, Sean (3 March 2023). "King Charles to travel to France and Germany in first state visits". BBC News. Retrieved 25 March 2023.
  136. ^ a b c Taylor, Will (21 March 2023). "Cancel King's state visit to France, Macron told". LBC. from the original on 22 March 2023. Retrieved 22 March 2023.
  137. ^ a b Adamson, Thomas (23 March 2023). "No red carpet: French unrest impacts King Charles III's trip". AP. Danica Kirka in London contributed to this report. Paris. from the original on 23 March 2023. Retrieved 23 March 2023.
  138. ^ Ward, Victoria; Song, Vivian (23 March 2023). "Versailles banquet held for King Charles could be cancelled amid protests". The Telegraph. from the original on 24 March 2023. Retrieved 23 March 2023.
  139. ^ "King Charles's France visit postponed after pension protests". BBC News. 24 March 2023. from the original on 24 March 2023. Retrieved 24 March 2023.
  140. ^ a b Kirby, Paul; Schofield, Hugh; Coughlan, Sean (24 March 2023). . BBC News. Archived from the original on 24 March 2023. Retrieved 24 March 2023.
  141. ^ BBC News at One, BBC One, 22 March 2023 (23m55s–24m07s).
  142. ^ Al Jazeera, 22 March 2023 (1:45pm-1:46pm GMT)
  143. ^ a b c "Paris stinks as uncollected trash mounts to 10,000 tonnes due to strikes". France24. AFP. 17 March 2023. from the original on 18 March 2023. Retrieved 18 March 2023.
  144. ^ a b c Chrisafis, Angelique (15 March 2023). "'It's disgusting': Paris rots under mounds of rubbish as bin collectors extend strike". The Guardian. Paris. from the original on 20 March 2023. Retrieved 20 March 2023.
  145. ^ a b c Bodinier, Johan (21 March 2023). "France protest arrests: Are the police abusing the legal system?". Euronews. with AFP. from the original on 21 March 2023. Retrieved 21 March 2023.
  146. ^ "French police getting 'rougher' as spontaneous protests grow". Le Monde.fr. 20 March 2023. from the original on 22 March 2023. Retrieved 22 March 2023.
  147. ^ "Hundreds arrested as French protests continue after government survives no-confidence vote". France 24. 21 March 2023. from the original on 22 March 2023. Retrieved 22 March 2023.
  148. ^ Goodall, Lewis [@lewis_goodall] (23 March 2023). "French police on pretty brutal form. Using batons quite indiscriminately to those in their way. Even one of our team, despite our saying we were press" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  149. ^ Goodall, Lewis [@lewis_goodall] (23 March 2023). "Stun grenades also thrown with abandon" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  150. ^ Horobin, William; Nussbaum, Ania (30 January 2023). "Macron Digs In as Hostility to French Pension Reform Mushrooms". Bloomberg.com. Retrieved 3 February 2023.
  151. ^ "French pension reforms and the protests they faced". Reuters. 19 January 2023. from the original on 3 February 2023. Retrieved 3 February 2023.
  152. ^ "French retirement reform may have political consequences far beyond the borders of France". Theory driven political analysis. from the original on 24 March 2023. Retrieved 3 February 2023.
  153. ^ Guinaudeau, Isabelle [@iguinaudeau] (18 March 2023). "In our @WEPsocial paper, Michael Becher, Sylvain Brouard and I have shown that there is a substantial political/electoral cost for using the 49.3 procedure. Executive approval declines after confidence votes" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  154. ^ "Iran Condemns France For 'Repression' Of Protests". Barron's. 24 March 2023. from the original on 24 March 2023. Retrieved 24 March 2023.Retrieved 2023-03-24.
  155. ^ "France protests: Iran condemns 'repression', Charles III postpones visit". i24NEWS. 24 March 2023. from the original on 24 March 2023. Retrieved 24 March 2023.Retrieved 2023-03-24.
  156. ^ Olinga, Luc (22 March 2023). "Elon Musk Sides with France's Macron on Pensions". TheStreet. from the original on 24 March 2023. Retrieved 24 March 2023.
  157. ^ "Ο Δ. Κουτσούμπας στη μεγάλη απεργιακή συγκέντρωση στο Παρίσι (VIDEO - ΦΩΤΟ)". 902.gr (in Greek). 23 March 2023. Retrieved 24 March 2023.
  158. ^ "King Charles state visit to France postponed amid violent pension protests". CNN. 24 March 2023. Retrieved 2023-03-24.

2023, french, pension, reform, strikes, this, article, contains, many, overly, lengthy, quotations, encyclopedic, entry, please, help, improve, article, presenting, facts, neutrally, worded, summary, with, appropriate, citations, consider, transferring, direct. This article contains too many or overly lengthy quotations for an encyclopedic entry Please help improve the article by presenting facts as a neutrally worded summary with appropriate citations Consider transferring direct quotations to Wikiquote or for entire works to Wikisource March 2023 A series of general strikes and demonstrations began in France on 19 January 2023 organised by people opposed to the 2023 French pension reform bill proposed by the Borne government which would increase the retirement age from 62 to 64 years old The strikes have led to widespread disruption including garbage piling up in the streets and public transport cancellations In March the government used Article 49 3 of the constitution to force the bill through the French Parliament sparking more protests and two failed no confidence votes contributing to an increase in violence in protests alongside the union organised strike action 2023 French pension reform protestsManifestations en France contre la reforme des retraites de 2023Part of the protests against Emmanuel MacronThe demonstration on 19 January in Paris Date19 January 2023 present 2023 01 19 present 65 days LocationFranceCaused byPension reform of the Borne governmentGoalsCancellation of the pension reform of the Borne governmentMethodsLabor strikes DemonstrationsStatusOngoingParties to the civil conflictAnti government protesters Trade unions List General Confederation of Labour French Democratic Confederation of Labour Workers Force French Confederation of Management General Confederation of Executives French Confederation of Christian Workers National Union of Autonomous Trade Unions Union syndicale Solidaires Federation Syndicale Unitaire Confederation Nationale du Travail Supported by NUPES La France Insoumise Europe Ecology The Greens Socialist Party French Communist Party New Anticapitalist Party Lutte Ouvriere Government of France Emmanuel Macron Borne government Law enforcement National Police National Gendarmerie Compagnies Republicaines de SecuriteSupported by Ensemble Citoyens Renaissance Democratic Movement Horizons Radical Party The Republicans ReconqueteLead figuresDecentralized leadership various social leaders Trade union leaders Philippe MartinezFrederic Souillot fr Laurent BergerLaurent Escure fr Francois Hommeril fr Emmanuel MacronElisabeth BorneNumberBetween 368k and 1 28 million police and between 1 and 3 5 million Trade Unions 1 Unknown Contents 1 Background 1 1 Use of Article 49 3 2 Motivations 3 Pre Article 49 3 invoking 3 1 19 January 3 2 21 January 3 3 31 January 3 4 7 February 3 5 11 February 3 6 16 February 3 7 7 March 3 8 11 12 March 3 9 15 March 4 Invoking of Article 49 3 and aftermath 4 1 16 March 4 1 1 Invoking of Article 49 3 4 1 2 Reaction by protesters 4 2 17 March 4 3 18 March 4 4 19 March 4 5 20 March 4 5 1 Morning and afternoon 4 5 2 No confidence votes 4 6 Cross party motion of no confidence 4 7 Motion of no confidence by RN 4 7 1 Aftermath evening 4 8 21 March 4 9 22 March 4 10 23 March 4 10 1 Strike action 4 10 2 Protests 4 11 Further action 4 11 1 Impact on Charles III s state visit 4 11 2 30 March 5 General impact and analysis 5 1 Concerns over increasing violence 5 2 Waste collection strike 5 3 Actions of police behaviour outcome of arrests 5 4 Political ramifications 5 4 1 Hypothetical alternatives 6 International reaction 7 See also 8 ReferencesBackgroundThe issue of pension reforms has been dealt with by various governments over recent decades specifically to tackle budget shortfalls 2 France has one of the lowest retirement ages for an industrialised country and spends more than most countries on pensions it amounting to almost 14 of economic output 3 France s pension system is largely built on a pay as you go structure both workers and employers are assessed mandatory payroll taxes that are used to fund retiree pensions This system which has enabled generations to retire with a guaranteed state backed pension will not change Compared to other European countries France possesses one of the lowest rates of pensioners at risk of poverty with a net pension replacement rate a measure of how effectively retirement income replaces prior earnings of 74 higher than OECD and EU averages The New York Times says the government argues rising life expectancies have left the system in an increasingly precarious state i n 2000 there were 2 1 workers paying into the system for every one retiree in 2020 that ratio had fallen to 1 7 and in 2070 it is expected to drop to 1 2 according to official projections 4 The Times reported that the measures have been defended with the need to work longer as the inevitable response to rising life expectancy As well the cost of pensions has partially contributed to France s national debt rising to 112 of GDP compared to 98 before the COVID 19 pandemic this is one of the highest levels in the EU higher than the UK and Germany 5 In an interview in March 2023 Macron said that when he began working there were 10 million French pensioners and now there were 17 million 6 The New York Times add that in order t o keep the system financially viable without funneling more taxpayer money into it something the government already does Macron sought to gradually raise the legal age when workers can start collecting a pension by three months every year until it reaches 64 in 2030 As well Macron has accelerated a previous change that increased the number of years that workers must pay into the system to get a full pension and abolished special pension rules that benefited workers in sectors like energy and transportation 4 As part of Macron s pension reforms the retirement age was to be raised to 64 or 65 from 62 It was pointed out in December 2022 that the pay as you go system that raising the retirement age would help to further finance as life expectancies increase and more start work later would have a surplus of 3 2bn in 2022 but the government s pensions advisory board COR forecast that it would fall into structural deficits in coming decades unless new financing sources are found 2 In March 2023 Labor Minister Olivier Dussopt said that without immediate action the pensions deficit would exceed 13bn annually by 2027 The government stated that the reforms would balance the deficit in 2030 with a surplus amounting to billions of dollars that would pay for measures allowing those in physically demanding jobs to retire early 3 The pension reforms have been long considered by Macron and his government Reforming the pension system was a significant part of his platform for election in 2017 with initial protests and transport strikes in late 2019 prior to the COVID 19 pandemic which saw Macron delay the reforms further 7 8 Raising the retirement age was not part of these initial reforms but another plan to unify the complex French pension system by getting rid of the 42 special regimes for sectors ranging from rail and energy workers to lawyers was crucial to keep the system financially viable 9 On 26 October 2022 Macron announced in a televised interview that pension reform scheduled for 2023 intended to raise the retirement age to 65 specifically that the minimum retirement age to be able to receive a full pension would be gradually increased from 62 to 65 by 2031 8 by three months per year from September 2023 to September 2030 Furthermore the number of years that contributions would need to be made to qualify for the full state pension would increase from 42 to 43 in 2027 10 meaning that some may have to work to 67 the year at which a person is automatically able to receive a state pension from 11 10 In addition to this France s 42 separate pension schemes would be streamlined 2 Macron clarified he would be willing to discuss the retirement age with unions and make potential amendments and that not implementing the reforms would lead to a reduction in the size of pensions 8 Details of the reforms were scheduled to be revealed on 15 December 2022 but were delayed further to 10 January 2023 as a courtesy to the Greens and Republicans who were in the midst of electing new leaders postponing the reforms to allow Macron to consult with said new leaders before revealing said details 2 In his New Year s Eve speech on 31 December 2022 he clarified that they would be implemented by autumn 2023 7 In early January 2023 prior to consultation with unions Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne spoke on FranceInfo radio stating that the government could show flexibility on the intention to raise the retirement age to 65 and were willing to explore other solutions that would enable the government to reach its target of balancing the pensions system by 2030 She announced that the policy would be presented to cabinet on January 23 and debated in parliament in early February with full details published on January 10 12 Use of Article 49 3 Further information Article 49 of the French Constitution Commitment of responsibility on a bill 49 3 Article 49 3 of the French Constitution allows governments to bypass the National Assembly and force through bills without a vote However invoking it triggers a proviso that allows for no confidence motions to be filed in the government On only one occasion in 1962 where the Article has been triggered has the government lost a subsequent no confidence motion 13 On 14 March The Guardian declared that Macron had two options broker deals with Les Republicains or force the bill through using Article 49 3 a measure that avoids an Assemblee nationale vote the government risks losing They said that m inisters have said the government would not use the 49 3 widely condemned as undemocratic and which risks inflaming a volatile public mood and that i nstead there has been a flurry of negotiations by ministers to guarantee a majority in the lower house u nion leaders have said using the 49 3 would lead to a hardening of opposition and would escalate strikes 14 On 16 March it was said m inutes before MPs in the lower house were to vote Macron was still holding a series of frantic meetings with senior political figures and suddenly chose to use special powers instead of risking a vote which he appeared poised to lose 15 The decision to invoke was a surprise last minute decision by Macron as he was not certain of the support of enough lawmakers to take the bill to a National Assembly vote 9 The Guardian explained that 49 3 s invoking illustrates Macron s difficult position in parliament his parliamentary party grouping having lost its majority in the National Assembly in the 2022 legislative elections 9 Motivations Members of seven different unions side by side in a demonstration that walked through a shopping area in Sens on 11 March The co ordination of the strikes by all of France s trade unions has been labelled a rare show of unity 9 with transport and energy workers teachers dockers and public sector workers such as museum staff having gone on strike Trade unions say the reform will penalise low income people in manual jobs who tend to start their careers early forcing them to work longer than graduates who are less affected by the changes 15 Polls have consistently shown that the measures are substantially unpopular 16 as well as the use of Article 49 3 to enact them without a parliamentary vote in the National Assembly France 24 reported that a poll from a few days prior to the move suggested around eight out of ten people opposed legislating in this way including a majority of voters who backed Macron in the first round of last year s presidential election 17 The American Prospect opined that earlier support from conservative members of the National Assembly for the reforms had faded away as a result of polling that showed the reforms were unpopular 18 The decision to invoke Article 49 3 was seen by those on the left as a a major defeat and a sign of weakness for the government that would now be seen as being brutal and undemocratic 15 Antoine Bristielle a representative of the Fondation Jean Jaures think tank commented that using 49 3 is perceived as a symbol of brutality that could erode support both for the government and democratic institutions 17 Macron s approval ratings have deteriorated as a result 16 19 20 specify It has been suggested that the reforms do not adequately tackle the disadvantage women are at within the workforce who usually retire later than men and with pensions 40 lower in comparison attributed to more part time work and maternity leave 11 Women are already subject to later retirement due to taking time away from work to raise children 21 Euronews outlined that the reforms would lead to women retiring later and working on average seven months longer over the course of their life while men would work around five months longer They quoted Franck Riester the Minister Delegate for Parliamentary Relations admitting that women would be a bit penalised by the reform in January 11 As well as this it has been argued the reforms will hit the working class and those who work in manual jobs disproportionately CNN pointed out that blue collar workers are likely to start working at a younger age than white collar workers The Washington Post pointed out that those employed in physically or mentally demanding jobs are still eligible to retire earlier with a full pension 22 although The New York Times equally pointed to how this was a concession by the government to mollify opposition which overall has failed because unions view the increase in the retirement age as a non starter At the other end of the scale it has been reported that some are concerned about being forced to retire later because older adults who want to work but who lose their jobs often face age discrimination in the labor market 4 Protest placard in Belfort on 15 March reading 1200 per day for the bosses Those opposed to the reforms argue the government is prioritising businesses and people who are highly paid over average laborers 23 and have disputed the need for urgency The New York Times saying they contest that Macron is attacking a cherished right to retirement and unfairly burdening blue collar workers because of his refusal to increase taxes on the wealthy As well opponents opine that Macron has exaggerated the threat of projected deficits and refused to consider other ways to balance the system like increasing worker payroll taxes decoupling pensions from inflation or increasing taxes on wealthy households or companies and that the official body that monitors France s pension system has acknowledged that there is no immediate threat of bankruptcy and that long term deficits which Macron and the government have argued would occur if these reforms were not implemented were hard to accurately predict 4 Jean Garrigues a historian on France s political culture theorised the unpopularity of the reforms can be partially attributed to Macron personally given the pre existing anger against him having struggled to shake off the image of an out of touch president of the rich He said that t hat s why he has not only all the unions but also a large part of public opinion against him as b y tying himself to the project opposition to it is heightened dramatized in a way 4 It has been criticised for having taken place during a cost of living crisis 24 better source needed which some have attributed to worsening the anger and protests over the policies citation needed The Times said that some have questioned the political wisdom of going ahead with the reform at a time when the public mood has been soured by high inflation as 7 1 billion of the 17 7 billion that the reform was meant to have saved has been wiped out by modifications to its provisions 5 Pre Article 49 3 invoking19 January Demonstration against the pension reforms unveiled by French government Sens On 19 January the Ministry of the Interior counted 1 12 million demonstrators including 80 000 in Paris 25 Over 200 demonstrations were reported in the country 26 More than one million people took to the streets in Paris and other French towns as part of countrywide protests over proposals to raise the retirement age 27 Eight of the largest unions participated in the strike over pension reforms 28 The French Ministry of the Interior said that 80 000 demonstrators gathered in the streets in Paris where small numbers threw bottles rocks and fireworks at riot police 28 Over 200 demonstrations were reported in the country 26 According to the unions 2 million people took part in the demonstrations with 400 000 of them participating in the Paris demonstrations 27 Despite the demonstrations Emmanuel Macron emphasized that the pension reforms would go forward French unions declared that further strikes and protests would be held on 31 January in an effort to halt the government s plans to raise the standard retirement age from 62 to 64 27 The new law would increase annual pension contributions from 41 to 43 payments throughout the year 29 Some flights out of Orly Airport were canceled while the Eurostar website reported the cancellation of many routes between Paris and London Though a few delays were reported at Charles de Gaulle Airport owing to striking air traffic controllers no flights were canceled 28 Reims on 19 January Number of demonstrators in the 10 most populated cities City According to the police According to the unionsParis 30 80 000 400 000Marseille 31 32 26 000 140 000Lyon 33 23 000 38 000Toulouse 34 35 36 000 50 000Nice 36 37 7 500 20 000Nantes 38 40 000 75 000Montpellier 39 40 15 000 25 000Strasbourg 41 42 10 500 N A 18 000 to 20 000 according to media sources Bordeaux 43 44 16 000 60 000Lille 45 16 000 50 00021 January Paris on 21 January Another demonstration was organized in Paris on 21 January supposedly long planned by students and youth organisations 46 Demonstrations organized by different groups took place in other cities like in Dinan 47 Limoges 48 and Lyon 49 31 January Demonstration in Bordeaux on 31 January Demonstrations were organized around the country with public transport schools and electricity production specifically targeted by the strikes Public television broadcasters were also affected by the strikes with news broadcasts cancelled and music played instead 50 According to the CGT union 2 8 million people took part in the protests while the Ministry of Internal Affairs counted 1 272 million protesters 25 Number of demonstrators in the 10 most populated cities City According to the police According to the unionsParis 87 000 500 000Marseille 40 000 205 000Lyon 23 000 45 000Toulouse 34 000 80 000Nice 7 000 25 000Nantes 28 000 65 000Montpellier 25 000 30 000Strasbourg 10 500 22 000Bordeaux 16 000 75 000Lille 15 000 70 0007 February On 7 February a third day of national protests were held after being called by l intersyndicale According to the CGT 400 000 people demonstrated in Paris down 100 000 from the 31 of January In total over 2 000 000 strikers participated in demonstrations according to the CGT while the police estimate that around 757 000 strikers participated in protests 51 11 February On 11 February a fourth day of national protests was held According to the CGT over 2 500 000 protesters took part in demonstrations a rise of 500 000 compared to 7 February while the Ministry of the Interior claims that 963 000 protested a rise of over 200 000 compared to 7 February In Paris over 500 000 people demonstrated against the reform according to the CGT while 93 000 demonstrated according to the prefecture The Intersyndicale called for recurring strikes starting on 7 March 52 16 February On 16 February protesters joined fresh rallies and strikes Unions said some 1 3 million people participated nationwide Thursday the lowest figure since the protest movement started on January 19 The interior ministry put the national figure at 440 000 down from nearly a million on Saturday 11 Feb On the day 30 percent of flights from Paris s Orly airport were cancelled 53 7 March Auch Occitania on 11 March In early March trains around the country continued to be affected by strikes and protests It is believed that 1 1 to 1 4 million people participated in over 260 protests across the country As a part of the protest union members blocked fuel deliveries from being made with the intention of bringing the French economy to its knees 54 11 12 March On Saturday 11 March the seventh day of protests was held in response to the National Assembly and Senate debating the draft law with a final vote expected that month Macron twice declined meetings with unions that week About 368 000 people protested below the 800 000 1 000 000 expected The following day the Senate passed an initial vote by 195 112 55 56 15 March Montauban Occitania on 15 March On 14 March The Guardian claimed that French unions have called for a show of force with a final day of strikes and protests in the run up the vote on the reforms in the National Assembly which would be the eighth day of national mobilisation sofar Transport Minister Clement Beaune said there would be disruption to public transport and flights but it was unlikely to be a Black Wednesday with not the same level of disruptions as with previous mobilisations 14 200 protests were reported to have taken place across the country 57 There were conflicting numbers of the strength of the protests the Interior Ministry reported 480 000 marched throughout the country with 37 000 in Paris while CGT counted 1 78m and 450 000 respectively 58 Figures from Le Monde dispute both these claims 59 Reportedly French police expected 650 000 850 000 protesters nationwide fewer than the largest protests the previous week with preliminary figures demonstrating a lower strike turnout in the energy and transport sectors at midday compared to previous days 58 Among those who were on strike were train drivers school teachers dock workers oil refinery workers as well as garbage collectors continuing their now ten day strike action 57 In the afternoon protesters gathered at the Esplanade des Invalides 58 with loud music and huge union balloons Police had ordered that the build up of rubbish to be cleared out along the march route after some used garbage to start fires or throw trash at police in recent demonstrations The marchers were accompanied by a heavy security force as they moved through the Left Bank along unencumbered streets Police reported that one group of protestors attacked a small business and that nine people were detained within three hours of the march beginning 57 The protestors march ended at the Place d Italie Known as Greve 15 mars it was co ordinated and organised by eight trade unions 58 The front of the march organised by multiple trade unions on 15 March Liquefied natural gas operations were suspended 58 with public transport severely affected it was stated that 40 of high speed trains and half the regional trains were cancelled with the Paris Metro running slower The DGAC warned of delays reporting that 20 of the flights at Paris Orly airport were cancelled 57 Elsewhere in Rennes Nantes and Lyon s ecurity forces countered violence with charges and tear gas according to French media 57 Demonstrations also took place in Le Havre in Normandy Nice 60 and Mulhouse 61 PBS reported that Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin had asked Paris City Hall to force some of the garbage workers to return to work calling the build up along the streets a a public health issue Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo said that she supported the strike and in response a government spokesman Olivier Veran declared that if she did not comply the Interior Ministry would be ready to act instead 57 Invoking of Article 49 3 and aftermath16 March Invoking of Article 49 3 Announcement of the invoking of Article 49 3 in the National Assembly Protests erupted after the announcement that the pension reforms would be enacted without a parliamentary vote Borne invoking article 49 3 of the constitution to do so just minutes before the scheduled vote on the bill 62 Inside the National Assembly opposition MPs on the left booed and jeered the announcement 17 and sang the national anthem 63 in order to prevent Borne from speaking 64 forcing the session to be briefly suspended before the announcement by Borne was made 63 65 Speaking to MPs who were booing her Borne proclaimed that w e cannot gamble on the future of our pensions The reform is necessary 66 15 Marine Le Pen announced she would file a no confidence motion in the government 67 describing the use of Article 49 3 as an extraordinary confession of weakness 66 a total failure for the government and that Borne should resign 15 Fabien Roussel of the Communist Party who also called on street protesters and trade unionists to keep mobilising 15 stated that the left was ready to make the same motion 68 Socialist Party leader Olivier Faure accused Macron of deploying a permanent coup d etat to shove through the legislation The Week said that Macron and his government insist the reforms are needed to keep the pension system solvent and government borrowing acceptably low 66 Politicians from across the political spectrum denounced the move Conservative MPs such as those from Les Republicains whom Macron has relied upon for support in votes in the National Assembly rebuke d the government warning that its move would radicalise opponents and undercut the law s democratic legitimacy 17 The Times reported that Macron was thought to have hoped earlier on Thursday to hold and win a parliamentary vote but changed tack after learning that only 35 of the 64 Republican MPs would back the reform leaving him short of a majority quoting Labor Minister Olivier Dussopt who said that they did everything to have a vote right up to the last minute 5 MoDem MPs who are aligned with Macron s Renaissance group said the decision to force the bill through was a mistake Erwan Balanant said he had left the parliament chamber in a state of shock while o ther centrist MPs said it was a waste and showed weakness 15 Reaction by protesters In the Place de la Concorde thousands protested figures are disputed between 2 000 protesters and 7 000 69 70 67 71 France 24 reported that it was a spontaneous and unplanned rally 67 but Le Monde stated that it was organized by the union Solidaires and authorized by the administrative court La France Insoumise leader Jean Luc Melenchon spoke to the crowd declaring that Macron had gone over the heads of the will of the people 72 He also claimed the reform had no legitimacy neither in parliament nor in the street 17 It is possible that many joined the rally in Paris after being turned away by police from the blockade of the Veolia warehouse in Aubervilliers 72 Demonstrations in Nantes in the evening of 16 March Later a bonfire was lit 69 with police armed with shields and batons deploying tear gas in an attempt to clear the square 62 at around 8pm 73 One police officer was reportedly injured 15 By nightfall 120 people were reported to have been arrested according to Parisian police 62 on suspicion of seeking to cause damage 73 by 11 30pm 74 the number later rose to 217 72 Protesters in the Place were observed to have thrown cobbled stones at assembled police before they moved in to break up the groups 63 67 using tear gas and water cannons 15 with smaller sections of protesters running down side streets and setting smaller fires 69 such as to piles of garbage 73 and caused damage to shop fronts 15 Numerous makeshift barricades in Paris streets were set alight 75 The CGT announced further strikes and demonstrations for 23 March 62 its head Philippe Martinez said that the forcing through of the law shows contempt towards the people 64 with unions describing the move by the government as a complete denial of democracy 74 France 24 commented that unionists were also out in strength hailing a moral victory even as they denounced Macron s violation of democracy 17 Protests took place in other cities such as Rennes Nantes Lyon Toulouse and Marseille 22 In the latter shop windows and bank fronts were smashed for which radical leftist groups were partially blamed 69 with shops looted Protests in the former three cities were reported to have resulted in clashes between protesters and police 73 and in Lyon consisted of approximately 400 people gathered in front of administrative offices calling for the president to resign 72 There had been a brief blockade of the National Library early in the day 17 The following day Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin told RTL radio that 310 had been arrested in relation to protest action nationwide with 258 in Paris 70 Macron made no public comment on 16 March but AFP reported that he told a closed door cabinet meeting You cannot play with the future of the country 15 17 March Demonstrations once again took place at the Place de la Concorde attended by several thousand people with chants dancing and a huge bonfire 70 protesters chanting Tax the rich 76 better source needed before riot police intervened using tear gas to clear the square after some climbed scaffolding on a renovation site arming themselves with wood and lobbed fireworks and paving stones at police in a standoff 70 On Twitter a clip of protesters gathered at the Place chanting we decapitated Louis XVI and we can start again Macron went viral 77 with protesters also more generally calling for Macron to resign 78 Broadcaster BFMTV reported that police detained 61 people following the protests 79 The Times claimed that the protestors ranks were swollen by members of the black bloc young masked troublemakers out for a fight 5 Notably head of the moderate CFDT union Laurent Berger said that a change in government or Prime Minister will not put out this fire only withdrawing the reform 80 Additionally Paris s Boulevard Peripherique was disrupted at almost 200 points during peak rush hour in the morning 79 by CGT activists 81 It was also reported that there was escalated strikes at refineries 79 with a blockade of an unspecified refinery in southern France having began earlier in the day 82 A CGT representative claimed that strikes would force the shutdown of TotalEnergies Normandy refinery by the weekend furthering the industrial action 81 a rolling strike was already in place there with strikers continuing to deliver less fuel than normal from other sites 70 DW reported on 18 March that CGT had already shut it down by Friday evening however 82 The CGT also announced an extension to picket lines at Electricite de France 81 Smaller protests and rallies took place in Bordeaux Toulouse 79 Toulon and Strasbourg 80 Specific methods of protest across France reported were street furniture being destroyed bins set alight and windows smashed In Dijon protesters burned effigies of Macron 81 Protests also took place in smaller towns like Laval and Evreux 74 Earlier in the day police pepper sprayed students protesting near Sorbonne University with some also walking out of lectures 79 In Lille the Institute of Political studies was blocked by student protesters 61 Strikers of the CGT union voted to halt production at one of the country s largest refineries by this weekend or Monday at the latest having already been on a rolling strike at the northern site TotalEnergies de Normandie and halting production would escalate the industrial action and spark fears of fuel shortages with striking workers continuing to deliver less fuel than normal from several other sites 74 In Bordeaux dozens of protesters and demonstrators trespassed onto tracks at the main train station including CGT unionists with CGT and NPA flags being flown 74 61 In Donges a roadblock was in place near to the TotalEnergie refinery oil terminals 3 61 in Valenciennes striking workers blocked the entry of a fuel depot while police in riot gear were observed removing tyres from the road near it striking rubbish collection workers clashed with police at the Ivry sur Seine incinerator and the blockade of the port of Marseille by striking workers of the CGT continued 61 Unions from SNCF the national train operator urged workers to continue another continuous strike 83 A multi party no confidence motion was tabled in the National Assembly earlier in the day Spearheaded by centrist group Liot it was co signed by NUPES 70 with a total of 91 MPs from five different parliamentary groups signing 79 Later in the day National Rally filed a separate no confidence motion 70 signed by 81 cross party MPs 79 party leader Le Pen said the decision to push through the pension changes was a total failure for the government 80 On RTL radio Interior Minister warned against what he called the chaos of random spontaneous street demonstrations describing t he opposition is legitimate the protests are legitimate but wreaking havoc is not and denounced the fact that effigies of Macron Borne and other ministers were burned at a protest in Dijon and that public buildings had been targeted Aurore Berge head of Renaissance in parliament wrote to Darmanin asking him to ensure the protection of MPs who feared violence against them because she would not accept MPs living in fear of reprisals He replied saying police would be vigilant against any violence directed towards lawmakers 74 18 March On 18 March it was announced protests in Paris were banned on the Place de la Concorde opposite parliament as well at the Champs Elysees Police explained this was due to serious risks of disturbances to public order and security and said those who did not obey this order could be fined 84 Nevertheless a bonfire was lit at the Place de la Concorde with an effigy of Macron dropped onto it to cheers 85 Despite this widespread protests were still reported in Paris 22 with a rally instead planned for Place d Italie in southern Paris at 6pm that evening 84 21 at which demonstrators chanted once again for Macron to resign and Macron is going to break down we are going to win 86 4 000 were present 82 Barricades were erected in the streets rubbish bins were set alight 16 with the glass on billboards and bus shelters smashed Barriers used to block the streets 82 and bottles were thrown at riot police 16 who utilised tear gas and water cannons to disperse protesters 81 arrests were made in the vicinity 86 16 protesters who gathered at the Place d Italie then marched toward Europe s biggest waste incineration plant which has become a flashpoint of tensions some setting trash cans alight and chanting mottos such as the streets are ours as firefighter sirens wailed 85 Politico quoting the Ministry of the Interior later reported 122 had been arrested in Paris with a total of 169 nationwide 20 Gathering of demonstrators in Belfort on the afternoon of 18 March Police also used tear gas against protesters who started a fire in Bordeaux 86 87 as BFMTV showed demonstrations in major cities such as Marseille Compiegne Nantes where around a thousand protested 16 Brest 22 and Montpellier 82 with around 200 protesting in Lodeve in the south of France 21 In Nice the political office of the leader of the Republicans Eric Ciotti was ransacked with tags left that threatened riots if the party refused to support any of the motions of no confidence in the government 16 In the afternoon in Nantes protestors threw bottles at police who also responded with tear gas 83 in spite of this DW described the protests in Nantes as well as Marseille and Montpellier as mostly peaceful marches 82 as did the AP They reported that in Marseille protesters eluded police and occupied the main train station for approximately 15 minutes In Besancon hundreds of demonstrators lit a brazier and burned voter cards 85 In Lyon some demonstrators tried to break into a town hall and set it alight with police arresting 36 83 police claimed that groups of violent individuals triggered clashes 87 A spokesperson for TotalEnergies reported that 37 of its operational staff at refineries and depots such as at Feyzin and Normandy were on strike Rolling strikes also continued on railways Students and activists from the Permanent Revolution collective briefly invaded the Forum des Halles shopping mall with banners calling for a general strike and chanting for Paris to stand up and rise up 21 and letting off red smoke canisters 82 5 A representative of a union representing waste collectors said strikers at three incinerators outside of Paris would allow some trucks through to limit the risk of an epidemic 16 while police claimed trucks from five depots had restarted work CGT announced strikers were halting production at two refineries over the weekend 83 CGT announced the shutdown of France s largest refinery TotalEnergies Gonfreville L Orcher Seine Maritime site 88 and at least two oil refineries might be shut down starting Monday Industry Minister Roland Lescure announced the government could order those striking to return to work in order to help avoid fuel shortages 85 AP reported that the DGAC had requested 30 of flights at Orly Airport to be cancelled and 20 in Marsille for Monday 20 March 85 19 March Hundreds of protesters were reported in Paris Lyon Marseille and Lille in the evening 88 In Marseille a large bonfire was lit with a large throng of demonstrators dancing around it 89 better source needed Some neighbourhoods of Paris continued to have collection of waste disrupted Philippe Martinez from CGT urged Paris collection workers to continue their now two week long strike 87 88 90 A few hundred people protested outside the Les Halles shopping centre before police moved them on Early on Sunday dozens of union activists marched through a shopping mall in Rosny sous Bois 90 and cars were allowed to pass through the tolls on the A1 and A13 motorways for free during the day 88 Shutdowns of refineries continued with reports of petrol queues building up in the south of France authorities claimed that supplies were high enough to avoid shortages 87 In response to reports of constituency offices of various MPs being vandalized Macron called the speakers of both houses of parliament to affirm his support for all legislators and said the government was mobilized to put everything in place to protect them late on 19 March 90 Macron also made his first public statement since 16 March issued to AFP he said that he hoped the text on pensions can go to the end of its democratic journey with respect for all Bruno Le Maire the Finance Minister commented further t hose among us who are able will gradually need to work more to finance our social model which is one of the most generous in the world Leader of the Republicans Eric Ciotti said his party would not back the no confidence motions as he refuses to add chaos to chaos consequently it was expected that the motions would not pass as the Republicans act as de facto kingmakers in the National Assembly neither Macron s bloc or the other opposition parties combined numbering a majority NUPES Jean Luc Melenchon informed RTL that f or as long as the 64 year reform is on the table we have to keep it up but decried the use of violence advising protesters to not make our struggle invisible with practices that would be turned against us as Macron is counting on people going too far so as to profit from a situation of fear 91 The Times reported that in response to Ciotti s party refusing to support the motions and that some Republican MPs may not follow their leader s decision National Rally president Jordan Bardella was attempting to persuade more to follow suit by promising his party will not put up candidates against them if the crisis does lead to an election 5 20 March Morning and afternoon DW reported on 18 March that union leaders were anticipating that some airports would see nearly a third of flights cancelled on 20 March owing to strike action 82 easyJet and Ryanair both British airlines warned passengers to expect disruption Ryanair said it was expecting possible cancellations and delays on flights to and from France from 20 to 23 March Eurostar announced that trains would run a normal service on 20 and 21 March but there would be disruption to public transport in Lille on 20 March 92 In the morning rubbish piles were set alight around the ring road in Rennes as part of a road blockade with protesters also blockading waste collection points and the nearby Vern sur Seiche oil depot was blockaded 93 The road blockade was attended by a few hundred people It began at 6 30am and led to over 15 miles of halted traffic around the city Police used tear gas and charged towards protesters who were on the road and in surrounding fields 94 Shortly before midday it was announced they had all been lifted 93 95 96 However a damaged road in Porte de Saint Malo meant the speed limit was temporarily reduced to 70 kilometers per hour 95 Crisis24 said that industrial action at oil refineries was starting to impact fuel supplies with shortages of fuel at stations particularly in Marseille and the south of the country 97 Sky News on 17 March stated that garbage collection strikes are set to continue until at least 20 March 79 SNCF has warned of disruption to intercity and regional train services with only two out of three trains running on several lines of Paris RATP network Crisis24 reported that such disruptions will continue until 23 March when the national strike will exacerbate service provision 97 On 17 March teachers unions called for strikes in the following weeks possibly disrupting the baccalaureat exams 78 which begin on 20 March CFDT s Laurent Berger proclaimed that she wished for no disruption to the exams as they could just worsen the already high stress levels of the students taking them 87 39 of TotalEnergie workers were on strike 98 Le Monde reported that half of filling stations lacked one or more fuels in the southeastern region of Provence Alpes Cote d Azur requiring local authorities to limit sales until Thursday with prohibition on the filling of jerry cans and many areas in the west of the country affected by the continued blockade and closure of the Donges refinery As well as this they quoted figures from the UFIP oil lobby that 7 of the country s petrol stations were affected by fuel shortages 99 up from 4 prior to the weekend and that only 5 8 of 200 storage facilities were blocked 100 meaning people in major cities in particular would be suffering this was worse in some areas as in Marseille around half of petrol stations are reporting shortages with an estimated 40 per cent completely closed in Bouches du Rhone 99 and that the Paris region could be hit by shortages at the storage facility of Genevilliers northwest of the French capital 100 The collaborative website Penurie mon essence fr said that approximately 986 fuel stations were plagued by partial shortages with 739 out of fuel completely 99 Olivier Gantois executive chairman of UFIP said t here will only be a shortage if people continue to rush to fill up and that i f customers panic logistics will fail and we will be out of supply Le Monde added such comments were in belief that shortages are the sole result of preemptive purchases on the part of consumers 100 No confidence votes It was confirmed on 18 March that the two no confidence motions filed against the government will be debated beginning Monday 20 March 101 The Republicans leader has announced his intention not to support either motion but The Times reported some LR MPs may defy him 5 A poll found that over two thirds of the French public wanted the no confidence vote to succeed despite the likelihood of it doing so being slim and for Prime Minister Borne to resign regardless of its success or not 23 The debate began at 4pm in the National Assembly with opposition MPs booing and jeering the Prime Minister when she took to the podium She commented that the government has never gone so far to form a compromise to pass the pension reform laws The author of the transpartisan motion Charles de Courson spoke that the removal of the government was the only way of stopping the social and political crisis in this country Eric Ciotti leader of the Republicans said invoking Article 49 3 was a result of many years of political failures that brought to the fore a profound crisis in our constitution but did not think the no confidence votes was the solution required 24 Both motions of no confidence failed 24 The trans partisan vote of no confidence failed by nine votes 102 while National Rally s no confidence motion only received 94 votes after other opposition parties declared their intention to not vote for it 103 Only 19 members of the Republicans voted for the transpartisan motion 104 France 24 commented that over half of the Republican MPs would have needed to vote in favour for the motion to pass 101 Nevertheless France 24 reported that NUPES MPs did not expect the transpartisan no confidence vote they were part of to be so close 13 Immediately after LFI MPs shouted Resign at Prime Minister Borne and held placards reading We ll meet in the streets 103 while it was also reported left wing MPs held up paper reading On continue We will continue during the proclamation of the results Prime Minister Borne tweeted that We are coming to the end of the democratic process of this essential reform for our country I assumed my responsibility and that of my government with humility and seriousness She visited the Elysee presidential palace a short time after the government won the non confidence votes France 24 revealed that Macron was to meet Prime Minister Borne in the morning of 21 March the speaker of the National Assembly and the head of the senate over lunch and with MPs from his Renaissance bloc in the evening 13 Journalist Benjamin Dodman claimed that Borne et al would use and spin the success in the no confidence motions as a measure of how democratically legitimate the pension reforms measures are 105 France 24 noted some opposition MPs were exploring legal avenues to challenge the law before the Constitutional Council which must rule on the constitutionality of the reforms before they can be implemented 13 the Council could decide to strike down some or all of it if it considers it breaches the constitution 103 Melenchon called on people to express themselves everywhere and in all circumstances to force the withdrawal of the pension reform 13 Mathilde Panot LFI parliamentary group chief told gathered press that n othing is solved we ll continue to do all we can so this reform is pulled back Marine Le Pen called for Borne to resign and that Macron in spite of how unlikely it was should call a referendum on the reforms she told the press that he s deaf to what the French people want 103 ResultsThis section is transcluded from March 2023 votes of no confidence in the government of Elisabeth Borne Results edit history Cross party motion of no confidence Motion of no confidence NUPES LIOTTabled by Bertrand Pancherand 90 other MembersBallot 20 March 2023Required majority 287 out of 573 NVotes in favor RN 88 LFI 74 SOC 31 ECO 22 GDR 22 LR 19 LIOT 18 NI 4 278 573Votes against 295 573AbstentionsAbsenteesSourceMotion of no confidence by RN Motion of no confidence RNTabled by Marine Le Penand 87 other MembersBallot 20 March 2023Required majority 287 out of 573 NVotes in favor RN 88 LR 3 NI 2 SOC 1 94 573Votes against 479 573AbstentionsAbsenteesSource Aftermath evening Spontaneous protests erupted throughout Paris In the afternoon those on the streets reacted to the results of the vote by chanting Macron demission Macron step down In the evening in Place Vauban protesters gathered chanting Macron resign and Aux armes Take up arms with police push ing them back and blocked access to the square Barricades were erected along the Rue de Rivoli 13 In Paris protesters burned objects such as rubbish bins and bikes 106 CNN reported heavy police presence across the capital as demonstrators moved between locations 98 with AP quoting Paris police chief Laurent Nunez who said the violence was caused by groups of up to 300 people quickly moving through the capital 107 At least 70 people were arrested in Paris in the evening 98 which later rose to 234 106 most were arrested for setting rubbish strewn in the streets alight 107 Bonfire on Place de l Opera in the evening of 20 March Reuters reported that i n some of Paris most prestigious avenues firefighters scrambled to put out burning rubbish piles left uncollected for days due to strikes as protesters played cat and mouse with police and u nions and opposition parties said they would step up protests to try and force a u turn A CGT statement read that n othing undermines the mobilisation of workers and called for workers to step up industrial action and participate massively in rolling strikes and demonstrations 103 Nunez announced that an internal investigation would take place after footage of an officer punching a man walking backwards causing him to fall to the ground went viral on French social media 107 108 AP said that the protests that took place in cities across France were predominantly small and scattered with only some degenerating into violence late in the day 107 In Bordeaux a predominantly young group of 200 300 people chanted for Macron to resign A couple of rubbish bins were set alight with the gathered protesters chanting This will blow up 103 Protests were also reported in Dijon and in Strasbourg where protestors smashed a department store s windows 287 people in total were arrested nationwide 106 The office of Prime Minister Borne announced late in the evening that she will directly submit the text of the new law to France s Constitutional Council for a review and that she hopes that all the points raised during the debates can be examined referring as France 24 says to the challenges raised by some parliamentarians on the constitutionality of certain measures in the pension reforms 13 Opponents of the reforms on the left and far right have submitted requests for review only once the Constitutional Council has approved the bill can it be formally signed into law and it can reject articles within the measure if they aren t in line with the constitution with those opposed saying the text as a whole should be rejected Borne s office added that the referral was to accelerate the process Furthermore she expressed the government s solidarity towards the 400 police officers who were injured in recent days with 42 alone overnight 107 The Constitutional Council has a month to consider any objections to the bill 98 21 March On 21 March Macron announced he does not intend to dissolve the National Assembly for new elections reshuffle the government or call a referendum for a a reform he considers necessary for the survival of the system 106 nor intends to withdraw the reforms This was reasserted by Prime Minister Borne and Labor Minister Dussopt in Parliament additionally Borne said the government would attempt to involve the public and unions in legislating more in future though offered no details as to how and the two both agreed they had devoted as much time to dialogue on the pension bill as possible Macron instead plans to use a TV interview on 22 March to calm things down and plan and prepare for further reforms to take place over the rest of his term in office Reuters reported on 21 March of the unease within the parties that Macron is aligned or close to and that the President should not be continuing business as usual amid violent protests and rolling strikes that represent the most serious challenge to the centrist president s authority since the Yellow Vest revolt Gilles Le Gendre a senior Renaissance MP said that the president the government and the majority are all weekend and that i t s not because the law was adopted that we can do business as usual Also of Renaissance Patrick Vignal bluntly urged the president to suspend the pension reform bill due to the anger it has triggered and its deep unpopularity 108 Reuters quoted Eurointelligence analysts who said Macron has two choices p retending that nothing major happened and letting the crisis wear itself out or pursuing co habitation with the willing in the assembly Given Macron s nature we see him being more attracted to the first option A risky bet 108 On 20 March CNN reported that a uthorities in charge of civil air traffic asked airlines to cancel 20 of their flights on Tuesday and Wednesday and Air France warned of flight cancellations in the upcoming days 98 Police were sent in the early hours of Tuesday to unblock the oil terminal of Donges which had been occupied for a week by strikers The Ministry of Energy Transition also announced the requisition of three employees per shift at an oil storage facility in Fos sur Mer due to worsening supply tensions they clarified that t he requisition is valid for 48 hours as needed starting March 21 and relates to personnel essential to the operation of the storage facility 100 Hundreds of workers have blocked access to the gas depots in a town near Marseille 106 with strikes at multiple refineries across western and southern France partially disrupt ing oil shipments 107 Striking workers clashing with police at ExxonMobil s Fos sur Mer oil refinery as the Energy Transition Ministry announced it would need employees indispensable to the functioning of the depot to return to work Scuffles broke out with protesters joining strikers in response to the news Protestors attempted to block access to the site some intermittently thr owing objects such as stones at police which used tear gas to try to disperse the demonstrators 108 107 109 AP added that the depot supplies fuel for southeastern France gas stations which are currently most afflicted by shortages government spokesman Olivier Veran warned that more orders may follow in the coming days for other sites In Paris police Paris announced they had ordered rubbish collectors back to work to ensure a minimum service this will cover 674 staff with 206 garbage trucks resuming operation 107 The Guardian in an article dated 21 March detailed activity at a blockaded incineration plant in Ivry sur Seine south of Paris A crowd of students gathered to support the strikers at the depot with only a slow dribble of very few rubbish trucks now passing each day there The blockade has been ongoing since at least 14 March with some strikers and their supporters having attended as early as 5am over the course of the action 110 In the morning police had evacuated Paris 1 Pantheon Sorbonne University s Tolbiac campus having been previously blockaded and barricaded by students which has notorious precedent in that regard an attendee mentioned that many young students there had spoken of their experiences of police violence Outside the Ecole Duperre art school students had piled up a barricade of bins with signs saying that the decision to raise the retirement age would be met with a new May 1968 one student interviewed said she was too frightened of being the victim of police violence at night to demonstrate at that time of day 110 Skips were set alight during a protest in Rennes 111 22 March At lunchtime Macron gave a televised interview questioned by journalists from TF1 and France 2 He called the reform not a luxury or a pleasure but a necessity and that he did not enjoy passing this reform and had a responsibility not to leave the issue alone despite its unpopularity Of the protests he said protesters had a right to take to the streets and their anger had been taken into account but it was not acceptable when they resorted to violence without any rules whatsoever and he insisted he had continued confidence in Prime Minister Borne and regrets not succeeding in convincing people of the necessity of the reform 6 The CGT and CFDT union heads responded of the former Philippe Martinez said that the interview was outlandish and had taken millions of protesters for fools in claiming his reforms were the only alternative and adding that t he best response we can give the president is to have millions of people on strike and in the streets tomorrow while Laurent Berger of the former accusing Macron of rewriting history and lying to hide his failure to secure a majority in parliament with specific regard to his comments unions had not offered an alternative to the bill Berger was quoted as having scolded the president for for seeking to portray the pension dispute as a tussle between one responsible man and a group of irresponsibles 112 Marine Le Pen said she would not play any part in putting out the fire as the president was the only one who had the keys to a political crisis he had himself created and pointing out that the interview being broadcast during lunchtime news programmes mostly watched by pensioners which Reuters stated was the only demographic that is not dead set against the reform was an example of Macron s disdain for workers and how h e insults all French people in general all those who are protesting 6 113 Protest wise striking workers briefly blocked a TGV high speed train during a demonstration at a Nice railway station Protesters also blocked a train station in Toulouse 113 Additionally it was reported that 13 of petrol stations are undergoing fuel shortages due to oil refinery blockades and that almost half the pumps in the Bouches du Rhone area of the south have run dry Unions also said that up to half of primary school teachers would go on strike as part of Thursday s day of action but demonstrations were continuing on Wednesday including outside the southern port of Marseille Fos 6 News com au reported that m ajor fuel shortages are also impacting service stations across the country due to protesters blocking major locations with the biggest nationwide protest on record for France recorded this week with rallies held in more than 200 separate areas 99 23 March This section may be too long to read and navigate comfortably Please consider splitting content into sub articles condensing it or adding subheadings Please discuss this issue on the article s talk page March 2023 CGT had announced on 16 March that the unions planned another day of strikes and demonstrations for 23 March 11 114 the ninth day of nationwide industrial action since the pension reform strikes began 82 The largest protest was expected to be in Paris with demonstrators departing from Place de la Bastille at 2pm marching through the city via Place de la Republique and arriving at Place de l Opera at 7pm 97 115 Strike action Public transport was severely impacted by strikes Only two Paris metro lines were running normal service By late morning there was large disruption to rail services across France with SNCF saying that only one in three regional TER trains and one in two TGV or Ouigo services running 116 At Gare de Lyon train station several hundred unionists and strikers demonstrated on the railway tracks 117 An unofficial protest in front of Terminal 1 at Charles de Gaulle Airport blocked vehicle access 118 119 120 The Directorate General of Civil Aviation warned of disruption to flights at Paris Orly Marseille Provence Lyon and Toulouse 116 Around 30 of flights at Paris Orly Airport were cancelled and flight services were expected to be reduced through the weekend 117 The Snuipp FSU union said 40 50 of primary school teachers were on strike with strong walkouts anticipated in Paris and departments such as Bouches du Rhone Pyrenees Orientales and Haute Vienne 116 The Education Ministry stated that about 24 of primary and middle school teachers walked off the job as well as 15 in high schools 121 Exam supervisors also went on strike disrupting baccalaureat exams with over half a million students impacted 116 Workers voted to strike at an LNG terminal in Dunkirk reducing output to the minimum Amid oil refinery and depot blockades 14 of petrol stations were experiencing shortages of at least one type of fuel with 7 dry 122 The impact varied nationwide with reports suggesting that 40 out of 96 departments are affected particularly in the north in Brittany and Normandy as well as the Mediterranean coast The government mandated minimum staffing at all depots 123 The entrance to Paris Pantheon Assas University widely considered the top law school of France was barricaded France 24 commented this was a sign of just how broad the protest movement has become 112 Major tourist attractions such as the Eiffel Tower the Arc de Triomphe and the Versailles Palace were closed to the public 123 Protests Number of protesters by city according to numbers released by police 124 The Independent claimed over 12 000 police officers have taken positions in French streets with 5 000 in Paris as authorities brace for the biggest strike action 119 Numbers of demonstrators vary The Interior Ministry said up to 1 08m took part in protests across France with 119 000 in Paris the latter is the highest number to have protested in Paris since the strikes and protests related to the reforms began in January The CGT union meanwhile claimed 3 5m nationwide and 800 000 in Paris 123 Demonstrators flying flags and balloons of various unions in Paris on 23 March Demonstrations in Paris began at the Place de la Bastille at 2pm local time 97 121 ITV News reported in the early afternoon that it was currently the site of a large demonstration and also that h uge crowds have started marching in the major cities of Marseille Lyon Paris and Nantes as more than 250 protests were organised across the country 117 Philippe Martinez head of the CGT union said that t here is a lot of anger an explosive situation at the start of a rally in Paris as Reuters claimed that union leaders had called for calm but were angry with what they called Macron s provocative comments 120 Posters along the route of the demonstrations in Paris included those demanding a return to the retirement age of 60 and depicting Macron as Louis XVI 125 A heavy presence of h eavily armed riot police was reported 126 At around 2 40pm GMT journalist Lewis Goodall claimed that t he main demonstration route in Paris is full and so they re now filing onto every side street 127 He quoted the CGT union s claims that 800 000 were demonstrating in Paris 128 At around 4 05pm GMT he tweeted that French TV were reporting 14 were arrested so far presumably in Paris 129 Demonstrators on the July Column BBC News said the vast majority of protests passed off without violence but in the afternoon violent clashes were reported to have broken out in parts of Paris riot police having used tear gas as black bloc protesters were reported to have thrown fireworks bottles and stones at police and set bins alight Riot police were also observed using baton charges on the Grands Boulevards At other times on the march fires in the streets ignited some of the uncollected piles of rubbish with some small fires visible from the junction of Rue Saint Fiacre and Boulevard Poissonniere 123 Aftermath of a fire on Rue Saint Marc Mid afternoon clashes between police and protesters in Paris had grown more intense On the Boulevard Bonne Nouvelle one BFMTV report said the atmosphere has changed completely and that w e didn t expect it to get out of hand so quickly BFMTV also reported that there were at least 350 400 black bloc protesters using big fireworks and at point targeting a Strasbourg St Denis McDonald s restaurant A reporter claimed that police are deploying tear gas to push back the crowds but the huge number of people present are making it hard to disperse the troublemakers this was especially the cast at the Place de la Republique where police claimed they were targeted They estimated around a thousand troublemakers were among the peaceful protesters 123 By 5pm local time demonstrators in Paris had converged on the Place de l Opera Firecrackers and bins set alight around Avenue de l Opera were reported At around 5 20pm it was reported that that police on motorbikes had arrived in the Opera area Known as the Motos Brav M it is a controversial police unit as some have accused them of using excessive force They were booed and hissed at as they passed further away down Boulevard de l Opera By 6pm most people were now dispersing but low level clashes between police and small groups of rioters who have been throwing stones and starting fires persisted Up to 5 000 security staff were put on duty in Paris for the day 123 Protesters and demonstrations in Mans 320 protests were planned across the country with the biggest demonstrations in the southern towns of Marseille Nice and Toulon in the former two thousands of protesters demonstrated Marseille s port was blockaded by demonstrators for a second consecutive day In Lyon hundreds of railway workers students and others have taken to the tracks disrupting trains In Normandy thousands turned out in Rouen Caen Le Havre and Dieppe In Rouen riot police used tear gas against some protesters throwing stones and in Rennes used both tear gas and water cannons as some masked protesters erected barricades In Nice protesters converged on the city centre before marching to the airport and forming a blockade 123 Yahoo quoted local media that stated almost 10 000 were marching in Tours where protesters blocked train tracks and caused disruption to train departures 130 Smoke was observed rising from burning debris that blocked traffic on a Toulouse highway as wildcat strikes briefly blocked roads in other cities 118 Police fired tear gas at protesters in Nantes 120 where also a group of activists stormed the administrative court 131 and used water cannons in Rennes In Lorient a local newspaper reported that projectiles were thrown into the yard of the police station having triggered a brief fire 120 with claims that multiple police officers had been violently attacked A local prefecture office also came under attack in the town 123 The Times claiming that activists sought to storm a government building and to set fire to the town s police station 131 Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin responded on Twitter The attacks on and defacing of the subprefecture and the police station in Lorient are unacceptable Thoughts with the injured officers These acts cannot go unpunished 123 The Independent reported that a video on social media showed several trucks dumping tyres rubbish and manure in front of council offices in several locations and h ighways were blocked with barriers of burning wood and tyres as protesters raised slogans 119 The Palais Rohan in Bordeaux was set on fire by protesters affecting the front door though the fire was put out promptly by firefighters 132 Strength of the police presence in Paris In the evening Interior Minister Darmanin made a statement where he declared that there had been an attempt to kill police officers by some protesters BBC News and France 24 claim he announced 123 police officers had been injured nationwide 123 112 while an independent journalist said he claimed 149 had been injured in Paris alone 133 In Paris one officer was dragged to safety while unconscious as he and his colleagues came under fire from fireworks and other missiles The officer appeared to have been hit on the head In Rouen a young woman was reported to have lost her thumb after hit by a flash ball grenade used by police to try and disperse protesters Damien Adam Renaissance MP for the area says it s clearly unacceptable and he wants a police inquiry to find out what happened and police confirmed two officers were injured after missiles were thrown at them LFI officials have complained that six protesters had been hurt by police tear gas and stun grenades and wants to know what orders officers were given 123 Darmanin claimed over 80 people had been arrested so far 123 Shortages of firefighters in the evening meant that local residents themselves had to put out fires themselves Darmanin claimed 140 fires needed to be put out in Paris with 50 still burning at the time approximately 8 30pm GMT 134 133 In the afternoon union heads Berger and Martinez spoke out Berger appealed for non violence for the respect of property and people for non violent actions that don t handicap people s daily lives Martinez claimed Macron was blamed for the actions of protesters and demonstrators saying he had thrown a can of petrol on the fire 123 Hugh Schofield of BBC News said that unions and the left are calling the day a success with once again a large turn out of people showing their rejection of Macron s pension bill 123 Further action Impact on Charles III s state visit On March 3 2023 it was announced that King Charles III and Camilla Queen Consort would visit France between 26 29 March 135 However in the week leading up to the scheduled visit many news organizations began to report that the King s visit could be disrupted by the ongoing protests 136 111 The optics for the trip have been criticised The author of a biography of the late Queen Elizabeth II Stephen Clarke said it was very bad timing and that while the people of France would normally welcome a British king in this moment people protesting are on high alert for any sign of privilege and wealth AP commented that what was meant to be a show of bonhomie and friendship instead is being seen as an unnecessary display of hereditary privilege He added that the King and Queen Consort s plans to attend a lavish dinner at the former royal residence the Versailles Palace does not look good and seems very 1789 AP clarified that the lavish Versailles once the dazzling center of royal Europe is a potent symbol of social inequalities and excess 137 The Telegraph reported that the banquet intended to take place on 27 March could be cancelled or moved 138 LBC said that demonstrators had warned they would set up protests and blockades during the visit to Bordeaux and stop him getting the tram which he had reportedly planned to do on the historic trip 136 Sud Ouest reported that the intention was for the King and Queen Consort to arrive in Bordeaux by train and take a tram to the city centre 111 A spokesperson for the moderate CFTC union said that it was very unlikely to happen as n o drivers will want to drive him and will be a logistical challenge due to any tram he takes needing protection at the front and behind compounded by the risk of projectiles Olivier Besancenot of the New Anticapitalist Party said w e are going to greet Charles with a good old general strike 136 A CGT representative announced that there would be very significant actions on March 28 certainly big demonstrations and big blockades with police reportedly concerned that Macron s opponents will seek to hold a protest in the town near Paris during the banquet 111 EELV MP Sandrine Rousseau called for the trip to be cancelled asking if the priority is really to receive Charles III at Versailles Something is taking place within French society the priority is to go and talk to society which is rising up 6 111 On 23 March AP reported how the CGT s members at Mobilier National the institution in charge of providing flags red carpets and furniture for public buildings would not help prepare a Sunday reception for the king upon his arrival in Paris in response the Elysee Palace said non striking workers would set up the necessary accoutrements for the trip 137 On 23 March unions called for their tenth day of nationwide action for 28 March coinciding with the last full day of the state visit 123 On 24 March at the request of the French Government the state visit was postponed 139 Macron reportedly decided it would no longer be feasible or appropriate for the visit to take place once unions announced the tenth day of national walkouts on the 28 March during the state visit Eric Ciotti leader of the Republicans said the cancellation brought shame on our country while Melenchon was of an opposing mood delighted that the meeting of kings at Versailles had been broken up and that the English knew that France s interior minister was pathetic on security The visit has been rescheduled for sometime in the summer when things calm down again 140 30 March Reuters reported a new general strike was also scheduled for 30 March 78 General impact and analysisConcerns over increasing violence Compagnies Republicaines de Securite guarding Cafe de la Rotonde in Paris on 15 March Multiple outlets including media and unions have grown concern over the increasing use of violence in the protests particularly in the days since the government invoked Article 49 3 with comparisons made to the Gilets jaunes Yellow Vests protests of the first years of Macron s presidency On 19 March The Guardian commented that as police brace d for a week of unpredictable spontaneous protests in cities and small towns across France the mood of anger was likened to the start of the gilets jaunes protests 87 On 20 March Reuters also voiced that the tone of the protests had deteriorated to and were reminiscent to that of the Yellow Vest protest in recent days 103 Euronews on 21 March claimed that government insiders and observers have raised fears that France is again heading for another bout of violent anti government protests 106 On 22 March Reuters outlined that p rotests against the bill have drawn huge crowds in rallies organised by unions since January of which m ost have been peaceful but anger has mounted since the government pushed the bill through parliament without a vote last week t he past six nights have seen fierce demonstrations across France with bins set ablaze and scuffles with police 113 France 24 commented that unions had been united in coordinating their protests but that many expressed fears they could lose control of the protests as more radical demonstrators set the tone Fabrice Coudour a leading representative for the hard left CGT commented that tougher action ahead more serious and further reaching was possible that could escape our collective decision making Jean Marie Pernot a political scientist specialising in trade unions said that a lack of respect for any of the channels meant for the expression of dissent it will find a way to express itself directly One of the Yellow Vests prominent spokesmen Jerome Rodrigues spoke to protesters outside the National Assembly after the invoking of Article 49 3 on 17 March that the objective was now nothing less than the defeat of the president 81 Head of the UNSA trade union federation Lauren Escure admitted that when there is this much anger and so many French people on the streets the more radical elements take the floor and that it was not something they would want but was inevitable and will be entirely the government s fault he told AFP The heads of two moderate unions Cyril Chabanier of CFTC and Laurent Berger of CFDT expressed that unions were concerned 81 Cabanier said that an impression that it is just violence that pays was being created and that t here are some people who are very angry and the anger leads to greater radicalisation and radicalisation unfortunately leads to violence 5 Berger has been reported as having warned the government that protests could grow more violent if those protesting begin to feel that the Yellow Vests in France 24 s words achieved more with violence than established unions with their peaceful mass demonstrations 81 Berger told RMC radio alongside his demand for the reforms to be withdrawn that his union condemn s violence but added look at the anger It s very strong even among our ranks 85 On 19 March The Guardian reported that alongside the leader of the Republicans office being vandalised other MPs from the party were receiving hundreds of threatening emails a day Frederique Meunier told BFMTV that i t s as if tomorrow they want to decapitate us and that the emails being received amounted to harassment The constituency offices of Renaissance MPs the party from which Macron originates were also targeted 87 BBC News s Paris correspondent Hugh Schofield on 22 March said that the protests in recent days had been spectacular sometimes visually but not huge in terms of scale and mostly the work of very committed left wingers class warrior types who are leading the battle 141 Natasha Butler of Al Jazeera said the violence in recent days was sporadic 142 Waste collection strike Rubbish piled up on a street corner in Paris on 16 March A strike by waste collectors began on 6 March which included a blockade of the city s incinerators 143 Originally set to last nine days it was extended by another five on 15 March As of 15 March bin lorries were grounded at depots and at least three waste incinerators in the Paris area were at a standstill 144 The impact of the waste workers strike has left thousands of tonnes of rubbish uncollected on the streets of Paris On 17 March it was estimated the amount was 10 000 tonnes up from 7 600 earlier in the week Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said that strikers were being forced back under emergency powers designed to safeguard essential services and from the morning of 17 March told RTL radio that requisitioning is working and bins are being emptied although this was disputed by an aide of Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo 143 Hidalgo has maintained her support for the strikers despite efforts by government to break it with the deputy mayor in charge of waste Colombe Brossel commenting that any demand to force strikers back to work would be an attack on the constitutional right to strike 144 Paris municipal waste collectors started its strike and blockade of the city s incinerators twelve days earlier the proposed pension reforms would raise their retirement age from 57 to 59 Waste collection in Paris is split around half and half between them and private companies who remained in operation with some taking contracts to operate in areas worst hit by the strike action such as the ninth district whose mayor Delphine Burkli suggested calling in the army to clear the streets 143 Waste collection strikes also affected Antibes Rennes and Le Havre 144 On 18 March the mayor of Paris 12th district Emmanuelle Pierre Marie said that the priority was food waste in the streets AP describing the uncollected garbage as having become a visual and olfactory symbol of the actions to defeat the president s pension reform plan because it is what brings pests to the surface and that they are extremely sensitive to the situation As soon as we have a dumpster truck available we give priority to the places most concerned like food markets It was claimed that police had requisitioned garbage workers to clean up some neighborhoods 85 As of 19 March Philippe Martinez from CGT had urged Paris collection workers to continue their now two week long strike 87 Actions of police behaviour outcome of arrests Euronews reported that of the 292 arrested after the protests on 16 March that were taken into custody and presented to the public prosecutor s office to receive a caution only nine were charged with actual offences and so nearly 97 were closed without any follow up or charges being pressed As well they have claimed that many who just happened to be passing by protesters or demonstrators were arrested and taken into custody some without a clear reason why with French media reporting two Austrian children on a school trip were taken into custody after the 16 March protests only released following intervention by the Austrian Embassy On 17 March 60 people were taken into custody with 34 cases closed 21 with another result such as a caution or warning with just five ending up at trial Coline Bouillon a lawyer who represented some demonstrators told Euronews that a large group of people who had been at a conference were rounded up police justifying the arrests for their participation in a group with a view to preparing violence or concealing their faces they were remanded in custody for one to two days she among a group of lawyers intend to file a collective complaint against the police for arbitrary detention and obstruction of the freedom to demonstrate 145 Such arbitrary police custody mass arrest tactics have been accused by politicians judges and lawyers alike of being utilised simply to frustrate the protest movement it being perceived through precedent such as in the gilet jaunes protests as a repression of the social movement This view was shared by a judges union the Syndicat de la Magistrature SM with Raphael Kempf a French lawyer in judiciary repression methods commenting that it was the first time the government had used criminal law to dissuade demonstrators from demonstrating and exercising their freedom said Raphael Kempf a French lawyer specialising in judiciary repression methods Fabien Jobard research director at France s National Scientific Research Centre CNRS said that a judicialisation of policing has taken place over the past 15 years with specific reference to a 2010 law that created the offence of participation in a group with a view to committing violence or damage its original remit of mitigating against gang violence and at sporting venues has been expanded to protests and demonstrations 145 According to Le Monde critics are expressing concerns over the violent confrontations and the systematic use of arrests at rallies 146 On 20 March on television police were seen momentarily firing tear gas and rushing at demonstrators in several cities with special motorbike officers thrusting through protesters which made Clement Voule the UN Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Association respond on Twitter by stating that officers should avoid using disproportionate force 147 On 21 March an Interior Ministry spokesperson commented that there are no unjustified arrests and people are questioned for offences which in our eyes are constituted and 48 hours of police custody to try to process the offence is short AFP was told by a senior police source that instructions have not been given to conduct mass arrests adding when high risk profiles are arrested they are no longer agitating others another officer added that with such a high number of arrests the manoeuvre is risky as they expose the workforce monopolise officers and risk radicalising the demonstrators 145 On 21 March The Guardian reported that the police watchdog is investigating allegations that four young women in Nantes were sexually assaulted during police controls at a demonstration last week 110 On 23 March British journalist Lewis Goodall covering the demonstrations in Paris reported that police were on pretty brutal form stating a member of his team had been targeted by police despite asserting they were press and were also throwing their stun grenades with abandon 148 149 During the protests of the 23 March hundreds of officers were injured across France However as BBC News wrote protesters were also injured by police stun grenades and the Council of Europe declared that there was no justification for excessive force by authorities 140 Political ramifications Macron s proposal to raise the retirement age from 62 to 64 has been compared to former President Nicholas Sarkozy s 2010 reform that raised the retirement age from 60 to 62 which also led to massive strikes and protests across France 150 151 Public opinion polling analysis has shown that Sarkozy s push for reform played a role in driving voters to both the Socialist Party and the far right National Front in the 2012 presidential election 152 One author of a paper in academic journal West European Politics tweeted a screenshot of the results of a study that showed executive approval has historically fallen after no confidence votes and linked it to what the impact of invoking Article 49 3 could be 153 The Guardian touched on political dissatisfaction comparing the protests to that of the gilet jaunes which were initially against fuel tax rises but evolved to encompass a wider lack of trust in the political system 87 Antoine Bristielle from the Fondation Jean Jaures think tank opined that the invoking of Article 49 3 could be perceived as a symbol of brutality and could erode support both for the government and democratic institutions 17 Hypothetical alternatives Many citation needed theorised that in the aftermath of the pension reforms controversy Macron would fire Prime Minister Borne such as to try and reset his image 91 while prominent figures of opposition parties suggested using a referendum and put the decision to implement the reforms to voters 5 Prior to the no confidence votes which failed and thus the pension reforms entered into law France 24 outlined the alternatives They contended that the votes were likely to fail even the one tabled by the centrist group LIOT which was most likely to attract transpartisan support unless enough members of the Republicans broke ranks and voted in favour which did not happen and the potential consequence of the National Assembly being dissolved and fresh elections being triggered which Macron has at his disposal regardless was also unlikely Failure of the no confidence votes leaves attempts to hold a referendum as one other option known as a referendum d initiative partagee a shared initiative referendum or RIP it requires the support of one fifth of both the National Assembly and Senate as well as the signatures of a tenth of the electorate which need to be collected within nine months However it was pointed out that the triggering of an RIP would need to have been done before the enactment of the law yet according to Stephane Peu deputy of the Communist Party Deputy NUPES has had the support of the necessary 185 National Assembly members since 14 March two days before the invoking of Article 49 3 he said his bill would include language that stated the retirement age cannot exceed 62 101 The Times on 19 March wrote that the process being started would lead to the pension reforms being unable to be introduced until the referendum took place thwarting Macron s plans to start bringing in the changes from September and casting a shadow over the government s other work 5 Furthermore it was announced that members of NUPES would appeal to the Constitutional Council a deputy of the LIOT group said on 14 March that had the bill passed by vote in the National Assembly several appeals would have been made France 24 said that NUPES would argue that the reform which was inserted into the social security budget is a legislative rider since the text addresses more than just finances and that l eft wing deputies intend to rely on the opinion of France s Conseil d Etat Council of State which had warned the government of a risk that certain measures in its pension reform plan as well as the plan s lack of clear calculations were unconstitutional 101 On 21 March Macron declared he would not dissolve the National Assembly or call a referendum on the reforms 106 International reactionThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it March 2023 Iran condemned what it called France s repression of protests Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian said We call on the French government to respect human rights and further added instead of creating chaos in other countries listen to the voice of your people and avoid violence against them 154 155 Elon Musk announced his support for the reforms 156 Dimitris Koutsoubas the General Secretary of the Communist Party of Greece attended a rally in Paris on 23 March in a statement from Bastille Square expressing his solidarity with the struggle of the French people against anti labor policies against the anti popular choices utilised by both the French and the Greek governments in order to ensure the working people finally win and pave the way for their own interests and not the interests and profits of the few The International Anthem was played over loudspeakers with the railway workers and trade unionists being spoken to offering him a Friends of the Paris Commune handkerchief 157 The British monarch King Charles and the Queen Consort postponed their state visit to France amid violent widespread protests 158 See also Wikimedia Commons has media related to Demonstrations and protests against pension reform in France 2023 1995 strikes in France 2010 French pension reform strikes 2019 2020 French pension reform strike May 68 2022 French protests Protests against Emmanuel Macron Yellow vests protestsReferences Clair Alice Guillot Julien 2 February 2023 Reforme des retraites suivez l ampleur de la mobilisation manifestation apres manifestation Retirement Reform follow the size of the mobilisation protest after protest Liberation in French Archived from the original on 22 March 2023 Retrieved 21 March 2023 a b c d President Macron pushes back presentation of French pension overhaul to January France24 AFP 12 December 2022 Archived from the original on 19 March 2023 Retrieved 18 March 2023 a b c Ataman Joseph 18 March 2023 French workers may have to retire at 64 and many are in uproar Here s why CNN Archived from the original on 17 March 2023 Retrieved 18 March 2023 a b c d e Breeden Aurelien 20 March 2023 Why So Many People in France Are Protesting Over Pensions The New York Times Paris Archived from the original on 19 March 2023 Retrieved 20 March 2023 a b c d e f g h i j Conradi Peter 19 March 2023 After days of violent protests inside Macron s battle to keep France working The Times Paris Archived from the original on 20 March 2023 Retrieved 20 March 2023 a b c d e Kirby Paul 22 March 2023 French reforms Macron refuses to give way as pension protests escalate BBC News Archived from the original on 22 March 2023 Retrieved 22 March 2023 a b France s Macron says pension reform will be carried out in 2023 France24 Reuters 31 December 2022 Archived from the original on 23 January 2023 Retrieved 18 March 2023 a b c Live longer work longer Macron vows to raise French retirement age to 65 France24 AP 27 October 2022 Archived from the original on 19 March 2023 Retrieved 18 March 2023 a b c d Chrisafis Angelique 16 March 2023 Why are pensions such a political flashpoint in France The Guardian Paris Archived from the original on 21 March 2023 Retrieved 22 March 2023 a b Keay Lara 17 March 2023 How does France s pension age compare to other countries and why has it sparked protests Sky News Archived from the original on 17 March 2023 Retrieved 18 March 2023 a b c d Van Ossel Julie 17 March 2023 Not just about retiring at 64 What you may have missed in the French pension reform Euronews Archived from the original on 17 March 2023 Retrieved 18 March 2023 Retirement age hike to 65 not set in stone says French PM ahead of crunch union talks France24 AFP 3 January 2023 Archived from the original on 19 March 2023 Retrieved 18 March 2023 a b c d e f g Protests erupt in France as govt adopts new pension law France24 20 March 2023 Archived from the original on 21 March 2023 Retrieved 21 March 2023 a b Willsher Kim 14 March 2023 France faces another day of strikes ahead of key vote on pension reforms The Guardian Paris Archived from the original on 21 March 2023 Retrieved 22 March 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k Chrisafis Angelique 16 March 2023 Macron uses special powers to force through plan to raise pension age The Guardian Paris Archived from the original on 17 March 2023 Retrieved 22 March 2023 a b c d e f g h Pension protests pile pressure on Macron ahead of crucial vote for France France24 FRANCE 24 with Reuters AFP 19 March 2023 Archived from the original on 19 March 2023 Retrieved 19 March 2023 a b c d e f g h Dodman Benjamin 17 March 2023 Bitter pension battle turns to democratic crisis as Macron bypasses French parliament France24 Archived from the original on 17 March 2023 Retrieved 18 March 2023 Meyerson Harold 20 March 2023 Democracy Is in the Streets The American Prospect Archived from the original on 21 March 2023 Retrieved 22 March 2023 Lichfield John 18 March 2023 Has Emmanuel Macron broken France POLITICO Archived from the original on 18 March 2023 Retrieved 19 March 2023 a b Barigazzi Jacopo 19 March 2023 Macron pays high price in popularity over pension reform survey shows POLITICO Archived from the original on 19 March 2023 Retrieved 19 March 2023 a b c d Protests held in France amid anger at Macron s pension reform Al Jazeera 18 March 2023 Archived from the original on 19 March 2023 Retrieved 18 March 2023 a b c d Masih Niha Noack Rick Parker Claire 18 March 2023 France protests What to know as Macron forces a retirement age hike The Washington Post Archived from the original on 18 March 2023 Retrieved 18 March 2023 a b Reid Jenni 20 March 2023 France s Macron faces no confidence vote as protestors arrested refinery strikes continue CNBC Archived from the original on 20 March 2023 Retrieved 20 March 2023 a b c Radford Antoinette Andersson Jasmine 21 March 2023 France pension reform Macron s government survives no confidence vote BBC News Archived from the original on 21 March 2023 Retrieved 21 March 2023 a b RETRAITES LA CGT ANNONCE 2 8 MILLIONS DE MANIFESTANTS EN FRANCE 1 272 MILLION SELON LA POLICE PENSIONS THE CGT ANNOUNCES 2 8 MILLION DEMONSTRATORS IN FRANCE 1 272 MILLION ACCORDING TO THE POLICE BFM in French Archived from the original on 31 January 2023 Retrieved 31 January 2023 a b Houdayer Geraldine 19 January 2023 Reforme des retraites la CGT annonce plus de 2 millions de manifestants le gouvernement 1 12 million Pension reform the CGT announces more than 2 million demonstrators the government announces 1 12 million France Bleu Archived from the original on 20 January 2023 a b c France Over 1 million march against raising retirement age AP NEWS 19 January 2023 Archived from the original on 23 January 2023 Retrieved 23 January 2023 a b c Ataman Joseph Lacroix Marguerite Ziady Hanna 19 January 2023 Striking French workers lead 1 million people in protest over plans to raise retirement age CNN Business CNN Archived from the original on 23 January 2023 Retrieved 23 January 2023 Why is the French pension age so low The Economist 31 January 2023 Archived from the original on 15 March 2023 Retrieved 16 March 2023 Greve du 19 janvier 80 000 manifestants selon la police contre 400 000 pour la CGT Strike on 19 January 80 000 demonstrators according to the police against 400 000 according to the CGT BFMTV 19 January 2023 Archived from the original on 20 January 2023 Retrieved 20 January 2023 Canetto Sidonie 19 January 2023 Greve contre la reforme des retraites forte mobilisation a Marseille Avignon et Arles Strike against pension reform strong mobilisation in Marseille Avignon and Arles France 3 Provence Alpes Archived from the original on 20 January 2023 Retrieved 20 January 2023 Ansquer Mathilde Grolee Laurent Glotin Sophie 19 January 2023 Greve contre la reforme des retraites tres forte mobilisation dans les Bouches du Rhone et le Var Strike against pension reform very strong mobilisation in the Bouches du Rhone and the Var France Bleu Provence Archived from the original on 20 January 2023 Retrieved 20 January 2023 Barletta Julien 19 January 2023 Maree humaine a Lyon contre la reforme des retraites Protest march against pension reform in Lyon Lyon Capitale Archived from the original on 19 January 2023 Retrieved 20 January 2023 Vau Alexandre 19 January 2023 Entre 36 000 et 50 000 personnes ont manifeste contre la reforme des retraites a Toulouse Between 36 000 and 50 000 people demonstrated against pension reform in Toulouse France Bleu Occitanie Archived from the original on 20 January 2023 Retrieved 20 January 2023 France Massive demonstration against the pension reform in Toulouse 19 January 2023 on YouTube Marabeuf Corentin Ruiz Benoit Langlois Marine 19 January 2023 Greve du 19 janvier mobilisation tres importante a Nice des milliers de participants Strike of 19 January very important mobilisation in Nice thousands of participants BFM Cote d Azur Archived from the original on 20 January 2023 Retrieved 20 January 2023 Greve contre la reforme des retraites les images de l enorme manifestation nicoise Strike against pension reform pictures of the huge demonstration in Nice Nice Matin 19 January 2023 Archived from the original on 20 January 2023 Retrieved 20 January 2023 Aguile Camille 19 January 2023 VIDEO Greve du 19 janvier contre la reforme des retraites Une mobilisation de grande ampleur en Pays de la Loire VIDEO 19 January strike against pension reform A large scale mobilisation in the Pays de la Loire France 3 Pays de la Loire Archived from the original on 19 January 2023 Retrieved 20 January 2023 Greve du 19 janvier jusqu a 15 000 personnes ont defile d Antigone a la Comedie a Montpellier Strike on 19 January up to 15 000 people marched from Antigone to Comedie in Montpellier Midi Libre 19 January 2023 Archived from the original on 19 January 2023 Retrieved 20 January 2023 Guiomard Morgane 19 January 2023 VIDEO Entre 15 000 et 25 000 personnes a la manifestation contre la reforme des retraites a Montpellier VIDEO Between 15 000 and 25 000 people at the demonstration against pension reform in Montpellier France Bleu Herault Archived from the original on 20 January 2023 Retrieved 20 January 2023 Reforme des retraites Je n ai jamais vu une manifestation sociale aussi grande a Strasbourg Pension reform I have never seen such a large social demonstration in Strasbourg Rue89 19 January 2023 Archived from the original on 19 January 2023 Retrieved 20 January 2023 Pres de 20000 personnes manifestent contre la reforme des retraites a Strasbourg on YouTube Barraux Tristan 19 January 2023 Reforme des retraites a Bordeaux 60 000 manifestants selon les syndicats 16 000 selon la prefecture Pension reform 60 000 demonstrators in Bordeaux according to the unions 16 000 according to the prefecture France Bleu Gironde Archived from the original on 20 January 2023 Retrieved 20 January 2023 Une mobilisation d ampleur a Bordeaux pour la manifestation contre la reforme des retraites A large scale mobilisation in Bordeaux for the demonstration against the pension reform Rue89 19 January 2023 Archived from the original on 20 January 2023 Retrieved 20 January 2023 Mullet Adeline Lecluyse Frederick 19 January 2023 Reforme des retraites a Lille au moins 30 000 personnes dans un cortege de plus de 3 km Pension reform in Lille at least 30 000 people in a march of over 3 km La Voix du Nord Archived from the original on 20 January 2023 Retrieved 20 January 2023 Marche pour nos retraites qui appelle a manifester ce samedi 21 janvier a Paris March for our pensions who is calling for a demonstration this Saturday 21 January in Paris BFMTV 21 January 2023 Archived from the original on 21 January 2023 Retrieved 21 January 2023 Menuge Ewen 21 January 2023 Cotes d Armor Manifestation a Dinan Ne pas laisser retomber la pression Cotes d Armor Demonstration in Dinan Keep up the pressure Ouest France Archived from the original on 21 January 2023 Retrieved 21 January 2023 Mylle Juliette 21 January 2023 Reforme des retraites pres de 200 manifestants dans les rues de Limoges ce samedi Pension reform nearly 200 demonstrators in the streets of Limoges this Saturday France Bleu Limousin Archived from the original on 21 January 2023 Retrieved 21 January 2023 Ce samedi deuxieme manifestation de la semaine contre la reforme des retraites a Lyon This Saturday second demonstration of the week against the pension reform in Lyon LyonMag 21 January 2023 Archived from the original on 21 January 2023 Retrieved 21 January 2023 Libert Lucien Hamaide Sybille De La 31 January 2023 France hit by second nationwide strike against pension reform Reuters Archived from the original on 31 January 2023 Retrieved 31 January 2023 Clair Alice Guillot Julien 2 February 2023 Reforme des retraites suivez l ampleur de la mobilisation manifestation apres manifestation Retirement Reform follow the size of the mobilisation protest after protest Liberation in French Archived from the original on 22 March 2023 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Villechenon Anna Favier Sandra L Henoret Solene 11 February 2023 Manifestations du 11 fevrier en direct entre 963 000 et 2 5 millions de personnes ont manifeste samedi en France 11 February Protests between 963 000 and 2 5 millions of people protested Saturday in France Le Monde in French Archived from the original on 11 February 2023 Retrieved 11 February 2023 New pension strikes grip France as MPs wage legislative battle France 24 16 February 2023 Archived from the original on 20 February 2023 Retrieved 20 February 2023 France pension protests Fuel deliveries blocked by strikers BBC 7 March 2023 Archived from the original on 7 March 2023 Retrieved 7 March 2023 French protesters take to the streets to rally against Macron s pension plan France 24 11 March 2023 Archived from the original on 17 March 2023 Retrieved 17 March 2023 French Senate advances Macron s pension reform plan as strikes continue France 24 12 March 2023 Archived from the original on 17 March 2023 Retrieved 17 March 2023 a b c d e f Sylvie Corbet Associated Press Thomas Adamson 15 March 2023 Garbage piles up as French strike nationwide over pension change PBS Paris Archived from the original on 17 March 2023 Retrieved 17 March 2023 a b c d e Nationwide protests ahead of final votes on French pension reform France24 15 March 2023 Archived from the original on 17 March 2023 Retrieved 17 March 2023 Decodeurs Les 15 March 2023 Pension reform protests Map of the March 15 demonstrations across France Le Monde Archived from the original on 17 March 2023 Retrieved 17 March 2023 Meheut Constant Porter Catherine Breeden Aurelien Nouvian Tom 15 March 2023 French Protesters Take to Streets in Last Angry Push Before Vote on Pension Bill The New York Times Archived from the original on 17 March 2023 Retrieved 17 March 2023 a b c d e France erupts in strikes and protests over pension age rise in pictures The Guardian 17 March 2023 Archived from the original on 22 March 2023 Retrieved 22 March 2023 a b c d Schofield Hugh Plummer Robert 16 March 2023 France pension protests Clashes after Macron orders rise in pension age without vote BBC News Paris London Archived from the original on 17 March 2023 Retrieved 17 March 2023 a b c Jacinto Leela 16 March 2023 A dog day afternoon in French politics as Macron uses nuclear option to raise retirement age France24 Archived from the original on 17 March 2023 Retrieved 17 March 2023 a b Chrisafis Angelique 16 March 2023 Macron uses special powers to force through plan to raise pension age The Guardian Paris Archived from the original on 17 March 2023 Retrieved 17 March 2023 Ataman Joseph Laborie Aurore Guy Jack 16 March 2023 Protests erupt as French government forces through higher retirement age CNN Archived from the original on 17 March 2023 Retrieved 17 March 2023 a b c Weber Peter 20 March 2023 Is France on the edge of civil unrest The Week Archived from the original on 20 March 2023 Retrieved 20 March 2023 a b c d Protests in Paris as Macron forces through controversial pension reform France24 16 March 2023 Archived from the original on 17 March 2023 Retrieved 17 March 2023 Corbet Sylvie Ganley Elaine 16 March 2023 France s Macron skirts parliament to force through unpopular retirement reform Associated Press Archived from the original on 17 March 2023 Retrieved 17 March 2023 a b c d The Associated Press 16 March 2023 Protests clashes across France after government pushes through pension change without vote CBC Reuters Archived from the original on 16 March 2023 Retrieved 17 March 2023 a b c d e f g French MPs file no confidence motion clashes erupt over pension reform France24 FRANCE 24 with AFP AP and REUTERS 17 March 2023 Archived from the original on 18 March 2023 Retrieved 18 March 2023 De Clercq GV 17 March 2023 Nomiyama Chizu ed Police fire tear gas at spontaneous anti pension bill protest in Paris Reuters Reporting by Antony Paone Paris Archived from the original on 17 March 2023 Retrieved 18 March 2023 a b c d French pension reform Angry protesters assemble in Paris after government bypasses vote Le Monde Le Monde with Agence France Presse AFP 17 March 2023 16 March 2023 Archived from the original on 17 March 2023 Retrieved 17 March 2023 a b c d Police clash with protesters in Paris as Macron forces through pension reform without vote TheJournal ie 16 March 2023 Archived from the original on 17 March 2023 Retrieved 17 March 2023 a b c d e f Chrisafis Angelique 17 March 2023 French anger spreads after Macron forces pension age rise The Guardian Paris Archived from the original on 21 March 2023 Retrieved 22 March 2023 Lanot Clement ClementLanot 16 March 2023 ALERTE Nombreuses barricades en feu dans les rues de Paris les incidents s etendent dans la capitale ReformesDesRetraites Tweet in French via Twitter Lanot Clement ClementLanot 17 March 2023 Un enorme feu est allume sur la Concorde a Paris Taxez les riches crie la foule Tweet in French via Twitter Lanot Clement ClementLanot 17 March 2023 Louis XVI on l a decapite Macron on peut recommencer scande la foule a Concorde ReformedesRetraite Tweet in French Archived from the original on 18 March 2023 Retrieved 18 March 2023 via Twitter a b c Foroudi Layli Ausloos Manuel 17 March 2023 Police clash with protesters at Paris demonstration against pension overhaul Reuters Paris Archived from the original on 18 March 2023 Retrieved 18 March 2023 a b c d e f g h Lynch Niamh 17 March 2023 French protests Violence erupts in Paris as police clash with protesters at Place de la Concorde Sky News Archived from the original on 18 March 2023 Retrieved 18 March 2023 a b c Armstrong Kathryn 18 March 2023 France pension protests Crowd clashes with police as government pushes through reform BBC News London Archived from the original on 18 March 2023 Retrieved 18 March 2023 a b c d e f g French unions see threat of Yellow Vest rerun over Macron s retirement push France24 FRANCE 24 with AFP 18 March 2023 Archived from the original on 18 March 2023 Retrieved 20 March 2023 a b c d e f g h i Violence erupts at French pension protests for 3rd night DW AFP AP Reuters 18 March 2023 Archived from the original on 20 March 2023 Retrieved 20 March 2023 a b c d Protests resume across France after Macron forced through contested pension reform France24 AFP 18 March 2023 Archived from the original on 20 March 2023 Retrieved 20 March 2023 a b De Lorenzo Daniela 18 March 2023 Paris police ban protest rallies in city s hotspots POLITICO Archived from the original on 19 March 2023 Retrieved 19 March 2023 a b c d e f g Adamson Thomas Garriga Nicolas 18 March 2023 French protesters march past garbage piles resisting Macron AP Contribution by Jade le Deley Paris Archived from the original on 22 March 2023 Retrieved 22 March 2023 a b c Vidalon Dominique Ausloos Manuel 18 March 2023 Holmes David Graff Peter Wallis Daniel eds Paris police protesters clash for third night over Macron s pension reform Reuters Reporting by Dominique Vidalon Gilles Guillaume and Forrest Crellin Paris Archived from the original on 19 March 2023 Retrieved 19 March 2023 a b c d e f g h i Chrisafis Angelique 19 March 2023 French government to face no confidence vote over pension age rise The Guardian Paris Archived from the original on 20 March 2023 Retrieved 20 March 2023 a b c d Struna Hugo 20 March 2023 Protests violent clashes mount ahead of French no confidence vote Euractiv Archived from the original on 20 March 2023 Retrieved 20 March 2023 Parreira Ricardo RicardParreir 19 March 2023 Le feu populaire est lance a la pleine Quelle magie Tweet in French via Twitter a b c Vandals attack French politician s office over pensions row AP Paris 19 March 2023 Archived from the original on 19 March 2023 Retrieved 20 March 2023 a b French government faces make or break vote after pension reform uproar France24 AFP 20 March 2023 Archived from the original on 20 March 2023 Retrieved 20 March 2023 Whitehead Joanna 20 March 2023 Travellers to France warned of potential flight disruption amid strikes The Independent Archived from the original on 20 March 2023 Retrieved 20 March 2023 a b AvicenCroco via Storyful 20 March 2023 Roads Blocked in Rennes as Protests Against Pension Reforms Continue in France Yahoo News UK Archived from the original on 20 March 2023 Retrieved 20 March 2023 French police face off with protesters over pensions Yahoo Sports UK Reuters 20 March 2023 Archived from the original on 20 March 2023 Retrieved 20 March 2023 a b Prefet de Bretagne et d Ille et Vilaine bretagnegouv 20 March 2023 Manifestation Actualisation a 11h50 La circulation reprend progressivement a Rennes Tous les points de blocages sont leves Porte de Saint Malo chaussee endommagee La vitesse est limitee a 70Km h Le prefet souligne la parfaite reactivite des services engages Tweet in French via Twitter Watch Pension protesters set fires on Rennes ring road Euronews 20 March 2023 Archived from the original on 20 March 2023 Retrieved 20 March 2023 a b c d France Activists likely to continue nationwide protests strikes against pension reform through late March update 8 Crisis24 20 March 2023 Archived from the original on 20 March 2023 Retrieved 20 March 2023 a b c d e Mawad Dalal Briscoe Oliver Liakos Chris Guy Jack 20 March 2023 France s government survives no confidence votes and controversial pension reforms will move ahead CNN Contributions by Pierre Bairin and Christian Edwards Archived from the original on 21 March 2023 Retrieved 21 March 2023 a b c d Carey Alexis 23 March 2023 France burning as violent pension reform protests cause fuel shortages mass arrests News com au Retrieved 23 March 2023 a b c d Cessac Marjorie 21 March 2023 Fears of petrol shortages resurface as French refineries strike against pension reform Le Monde Archived from the original on 22 March 2023 Retrieved 23 March 2023 a b c d Houeix Romain 18 March 2023 After Macron s use of nuclear option on unpopular pension reform what s next France24 Archived from the original on 18 March 2023 Retrieved 18 March 2023 Elections 202 2 2022Elections 20 March 2023 Resultats du vote sur la motion de censure POUR 278 La motion n est pas adoptee a 9 voix pres MotionDeCensureTransPartisane Tweet via Twitter a b c d e f g Pineau Elizabeth Foroudi Layli 20 March 2023 Protesters set rubbish on fire as French govt barely survives no confidence vote Reuters Reporting by Lincoln Feast Archived from the original on 20 March 2023 Retrieved 20 March 2023 World Elects ElectsWorld 20 March 2023 The motion of no confidence proposed by the LIOT group against the Government of Prime Minister Borne failed In Favour RN 88 out of 88 FI 74 74 PS 31 31 EELV 22 22 GDR PCF 22 22 LR 19 61 LIOT 18 20 Others 4 5 In favour 278 287 were needed Tweet via Twitter Dodman Benjamin bendodman 20 March 2023 In the end there is a vote says Prime Minister Borne Her govt will seek to spin this no confidence vote which it is likely to survive as granting democratic legitimacy to the pension reform which would otherwise have been defeated in parliament Tweet via Twitter a b c d e f g Armstrong Mark 21 March 2023 Pension protests continue across France as President Macron refuses to back down Euronews with AFP Archived from the original on 21 March 2023 Retrieved 21 March 2023 a b c d e f g h Corbet Sylvie 21 March 2023 French protests drag on after Macron s pension plan push AP Archived from the original on 21 March 2023 Retrieved 21 March 2023 a b c d Pineau Elizabeth Melander Ingrid 21 March 2023 Weakened Macron sticks with pension bill eyes new reforms source Reuters Reporting by Elizabeth Pineau John Irish Sudip Kar Gupta Noemie Olive Yiming Woo Writing by Ingrid Melander Editing by Christina Fincher Archived from the original on 21 March 2023 Retrieved 21 March 2023 TRT World and agencies 21 March 2023 Protests continue across France after Macron s pension plan push TRT World Archived from the original on 21 March 2023 Retrieved 22 March 2023 a b c Chrisafis Angelique 21 March 2023 Anger is growing protests and strikes spread across France over pensions reform The Guardian Ivry sur Seine Archived from the original on 21 March 2023 Retrieved 22 March 2023 a b c d e Sage Adam 21 March 2023 King s state visit to France will be hit by strikes vow protesters The Times Paris Archived from the original on 22 March 2023 Retrieved 22 March 2023 a b c Dodman Benjamin 23 March 2023 Democracy at stake French protesters vent fury at Macron over pension push France24 Archived from the original on 23 March 2023 Retrieved 24 March 2023 a b c Pineau Elizabeth Rossignol Pascal 22 March 2023 Macron stands firm on pension bill as protests escalate Reuters Reporting by Benoit Van Overstraeten Jean Stephane Brosse Dominique Vidalon Elizabeth Pineau John Irish Louise Dalmasso Yiming Woo Ardee Napolitano Geert de Clercq Eric Gaillard Writing by Ingrid Melander Editing by Christina Fincher William Maclean Archived from the original on 22 March 2023 Retrieved 23 March 2023 French unions plan more strikes against pension reform on March 23 Reuters 16 March 2023 Archived from the original on 19 March 2023 Retrieved 19 March 2023 Live More than 149 police injured 172 people arrested in French pension protests France 24 23 March 2023 Archived from the original on 24 March 2023 Retrieved 24 March 2023 a b c d Black Thursday strikes in France How bad is the disruption TheConnexion 23 March 2023 Archived from the original on 23 March 2023 Retrieved 23 March 2023 a b c Mass strikes spark shutdowns in France as pension age protesters rally ITV News 23 March 2023 Archived from the original on 23 March 2023 Retrieved 23 March 2023 a b Charles de Gaulle terminal blocked amid French pension protests Al Jazeera 23 March 2023 Archived from the original on 23 March 2023 Retrieved 23 March 2023 a b c Sharma Shweta 23 March 2023 Rubbish piles up on streets as France comes to a standstill against Macron pension reforms The Independent Archived from the original on 23 March 2023 Retrieved 23 March 2023 a b c d Libert Lucian Mahe Stephane 23 March 2023 Protesters police clash across France in day of strife over Macron s pension changes Reuters Reporting by Dominique Vidalon Forrest Crellin John Irish Sudip Kar Gupta Lucien Libert Stephane Mahe Eric Gaillard Bertrand Boucey Marc Leras Benoit van Overstraeten Writing by Ingrid Melander Editing by Christina Fincher and Angus MacSwan Paris Archived from the original on 23 March 2023 Retrieved 23 March 2023 a b Corbet Sylvie Turnbull Alexander 23 March 2023 Mass Strikes Upend France Over Pension Age Rise Push HuffPost AP Journalist Nicolas Garriga in Paris contributed to the story Paris Archived from the original on 23 March 2023 Retrieved 23 March 2023 Depots petroliers routes trains nouvelles actions de blocage contre la reforme des retraites France 24 in French 23 March 2023 Archived from the original on 24 March 2023 Retrieved 24 March 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Various 23 March 2023 Fresh protests in France to clash with King s state visit BBC News Archived from the original on 23 March 2023 Retrieved 23 March 2023 Reforme des retraites 1 089 million de manifestants en France selon l Interieur record dans plusieurs grandes villes 23 March 2023 Archived from the original on 24 March 2023 Retrieved 24 March 2023 Goodall Lewis lewis goodall 23 March 2023 Posters lining the protest route depicting Macron as Louis XVI One person tells us the people win or Macron wins It s that simple Tweet via Twitter Goodall Lewis lewis goodall 23 March 2023 Heavily armed riot police as far as the eye can see in central Paris Tweet via Twitter Goodall Lewis lewis goodall 23 March 2023 The sheer magnitude the number of people Macron has motivated to turn out on the streets of Paris is extraordinary The main demonstration route is full they re now filing onto every side street Tweet via Twitter Goodall Lewis lewis goodall 23 March 2023 CGT Union says more than 800 000 protesters have taken to the streets of Paris the most significant action against Macron since the start of this crisis Tweet via Twitter Goodall Lewis lewis goodall 23 March 2023 French networks saying 14 people have been arrested so far Tweet via Twitter Protesters Block Train Tracks in Tours on Day of French Strikes Yahoo Sport 23 March 2023 Archived from the original on 24 March 2023 Retrieved 23 March 2023 a b Bremner Charles Sage Adam 23 March 2023 France strikes police station and courthouse attacked in pension protest The Times Paris Archived from the original on 23 March 2023 Retrieved 23 March 2023 Bordeaux town hall set on fire in France pension protests BBC News 23 March 2023 Archived from the original on 23 March 2023 Retrieved 23 March 2023 a b Goodall Lewis lewis goodall 23 March 2023 149 police officers have been injured in Paris tonight 140 fires have had to be put out 50 are still burning in the capital Says some of those who came to kill are from the extreme left Tweet via Twitter Goodall Lewis lewis goodall 23 March 2023 1Local Parisians tell us there haven t been enough firefighters People bringing hoses buckets saucepans full of water out of their apartments to douse flames until fire service arrives Smoke across central Paris Tweet via Twitter Coughlan Sean 3 March 2023 King Charles to travel to France and Germany in first state visits BBC News Retrieved 25 March 2023 a b c Taylor Will 21 March 2023 Cancel King s state visit to France Macron told LBC Archived from the original on 22 March 2023 Retrieved 22 March 2023 a b Adamson Thomas 23 March 2023 No red carpet French unrest impacts King Charles III s trip AP Danica Kirka in London contributed to this report Paris Archived from the original on 23 March 2023 Retrieved 23 March 2023 Ward Victoria Song Vivian 23 March 2023 Versailles banquet held for King Charles could be cancelled amid protests The Telegraph Archived from the original on 24 March 2023 Retrieved 23 March 2023 King Charles s France visit postponed after pension protests BBC News 24 March 2023 Archived from the original on 24 March 2023 Retrieved 24 March 2023 a b Kirby Paul Schofield Hugh Coughlan Sean 24 March 2023 King Charles s France visit postponed after pension protests BBC News Archived from the original on 24 March 2023 Retrieved 24 March 2023 BBC News at One BBC One 22 March 2023 23m55s 24m07s Al Jazeera 22 March 2023 1 45pm 1 46pm GMT a b c Paris stinks as uncollected trash mounts to 10 000 tonnes due to strikes France24 AFP 17 March 2023 Archived from the original on 18 March 2023 Retrieved 18 March 2023 a b c Chrisafis Angelique 15 March 2023 It s disgusting Paris rots under mounds of rubbish as bin collectors extend strike The Guardian Paris Archived from the original on 20 March 2023 Retrieved 20 March 2023 a b c Bodinier Johan 21 March 2023 France protest arrests Are the police abusing the legal system Euronews with AFP Archived from the original on 21 March 2023 Retrieved 21 March 2023 French police getting rougher as spontaneous protests grow Le Monde fr 20 March 2023 Archived from the original on 22 March 2023 Retrieved 22 March 2023 Hundreds arrested as French protests continue after government survives no confidence vote France 24 21 March 2023 Archived from the original on 22 March 2023 Retrieved 22 March 2023 Goodall Lewis lewis goodall 23 March 2023 French police on pretty brutal form Using batons quite indiscriminately to those in their way Even one of our team despite our saying we were press Tweet via Twitter Goodall Lewis lewis goodall 23 March 2023 Stun grenades also thrown with abandon Tweet via Twitter Horobin William Nussbaum Ania 30 January 2023 Macron Digs In as Hostility to French Pension Reform Mushrooms Bloomberg com Retrieved 3 February 2023 French pension reforms and the protests they faced Reuters 19 January 2023 Archived from the original on 3 February 2023 Retrieved 3 February 2023 French retirement reform may have political consequences far beyond the borders of France Theory driven political analysis Archived from the original on 24 March 2023 Retrieved 3 February 2023 Guinaudeau Isabelle iguinaudeau 18 March 2023 In our WEPsocial paper Michael Becher Sylvain Brouard and I have shown that there is a substantial political electoral cost for using the 49 3 procedure Executive approval declines after confidence votes Tweet via Twitter Iran Condemns France For Repression Of Protests Barron s 24 March 2023 Archived from the original on 24 March 2023 Retrieved 24 March 2023 Retrieved 2023 03 24 France protests Iran condemns repression Charles III postpones visit i24NEWS 24 March 2023 Archived from the original on 24 March 2023 Retrieved 24 March 2023 Retrieved 2023 03 24 Olinga Luc 22 March 2023 Elon Musk Sides with France s Macron on Pensions TheStreet Archived from the original on 24 March 2023 Retrieved 24 March 2023 O D Koytsoympas sth megalh apergiakh sygkentrwsh sto Parisi VIDEO FWTO 902 gr in Greek 23 March 2023 Retrieved 24 March 2023 King Charles state visit to France postponed amid violent pension protests CNN 24 March 2023 Retrieved 2023 03 24 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2023 French pension reform strikes amp oldid 1146493856, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.