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France Pension Protests: Bordeaux City Hall Set on Fire

In France's southwest city of Bordeaux, the front door of the town hall was set on fire as nationwide protests over pension reforms gripped the country on Thursday....

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by Improve the News Foundation
France Pension Protests: Bordeaux City Hall Set on Fire
Image credit: Shutterstock [via The Guardian]
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Facts

  • In France's southwest city of Bordeaux, the front door of the town hall was set on fire as nationwide protests over pension reforms gripped the country on Thursday.1
  • Trade unions claimed that 3.5M Frenchmen took to the streets, including a record 800K in Paris where clashes erupted late into the night. However, authorities suggested the figure was far lower at 1.1M, claiming that no more than 120K people marched through Paris.2
  • While many of the demonstrations had been peaceful, others were marred by violence and vandalism. Police added that over 450 protesters were arrested across the country while 441 police officers and gendarmes sustained injuries.3
  • The protests were called over Pres. Macron's move to raise the pension age from 62 to 64 — changes pushed through last week using a constitutional measure, rather than putting the issue to a vote.2
  • Macron then survived two no-confidence votes earlier this week, clearing the way for the measure to be implemented. However, locals refused to roll over and a day of mass protest and strikes was announced for Thursday.4
  • On Friday, the Elysée Palace announced that Britain's King Charles III's visit to Paris and Bordeaux — expected to start on Sunday — has been consensually postponed as a new day of protests is planned for Tuesday.5

Sources: 1BBC News, 2Guardian, 3Mirror, 4CNN and 5Politico.

Narratives

  • Narrative A, as provided by Connexionfrance. French citizens have to embrace pension reforms. With longer life expectancies and an aging population, the cost to the state's coffers has become unsustainable. France needs to get with the times and raise the pension age like all other European countries have done.
  • Narrative B, as provided by France 24. In spite of 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. Besides, there are other ways of raising the necessary money outside of raising the pension age — including reversing the tax cuts for businesses that Macron's government itself has implemented.
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by Improve the News Foundation

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