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France: Hundreds Arrested, Police Officers Injured in May Day Protests

France's interior minister Gérald Darmanin on Monday stated that at least 108 police officers have been wounded — 25 of them in Paris — and 291 people detained across the country.

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by Improve the News Foundation
France: Hundreds Arrested, Police Officers Injured in May Day Protests
Image credit: Getty Images [via BBC News]

Facts

  • France's interior minister Gérald Darmanin on Monday stated that at least 108 police officers have been wounded — 25 of them in Paris — and 291 people detained across the country since clashes broke out on the sidelines of the main union-led May Day protests against Pres. Emmanuel Macron's pension reforms.1
  • This comes as demonstrators armed with Molotov cocktails and other explosives hit riot police — who responded with a water cannon and tear gas — during the largest International Workers' Day rallies seen in France for three decades.2
  • While the ministry put the overall number of mostly peaceful protesters at 112K in the capital and 782K across the country, the CGT — a trade union which has for months conducted mass action against the raising of the pension age from 62 to 64 — claim the figure is threefold.3
  • Monday marked the 13th day of nationwide protests since January and the first time in more than a decade that France's labor unions formed a united front for the traditional May Day rallies.4
  • Anger has been ramping up since Macron pushed through new pension legislation without a parliamentary vote, instead relying exclusively on Article 49.3 of the constitution. The president has survived two no-confidence votes since the bill was passed.5
  • France's Constitutional Council last month approved the most controversial aspects of the reform — the gradual raising of the retirement age which will see it reach 64-years-old by 2030. Changes are set to start from September despite unions vowing to fight on.6

Sources: 1Al Jazeera, 2Daily Mail, 3BBC News, 4New York Times, 5FOX News, and 6CNN.

Narratives

  • Right narrative, as provided by The Connexion. French citizens have to embrace the pension reforms. With ever increasing life expectancies and an aging population, the cost to the state's coffers has become unsustainable. France needs to consider its economic and social future, and raise the pension age like all other European countries have done.
  • Left narrative, as provided by France 24. Despite those that say the numbers are unsustainable, the deficit for future years is not as dramatic as Macron and his supporters make it out to be. There are other ways of raising the funds necessary outside of increasing the pension age, including by reversing the tax cuts for businesses that Macron's government has itself implemented.

Predictions

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by Improve the News Foundation

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