‘A state scandal’: calls for inquiry into
Macron’s links to Uber lobbying
Opposition politicians respond to reports French
president supported Uber’s efforts to disrupt taxi sector
Jennifer
Rankin in Brussels and Angelique Chrisafis in Paris
Mon 11 Jul
2022 12.14 BST
Emmanuel
Macron is facing calls for a parliamentary inquiry, after the Uber files
exposed his extraordinary efforts as French economy minister under his
predecessor as president, François Hollande, to help the US cab-hailing company
lobby against the closed-shop taxi industry.
French
opposition politicians from the left and far right seized on reports of secret
undeclared meetings and the promise of a “deal” brokered by Macron inside the
government to help Uber.
The
revelations contained in the Uber files – a cache of 124,000 company documents
leaked to the Guardian and shared with the International Consortium of
Investigative Journalists – come at a difficult time for Macron’s centrists,
who lost control of parliament in last month’s legislative elections.
Several
figures from the left to the far right, as well as the leader of the leftwing
CGT trade union, called for a parliamentary inquiry.
The files
suggest pro-business Macron, who was re-elected French president in April, was
close enough to Uber’s managers during his two years in the economy ministry
from 2014 to 2016 for them not to think twice about contacting him for possible
help when their premises were raided by tax and other authorities.
Macron, who
promised in his first successful presidential campaign to make France a
“startup nation”, failed to record at least three of four meetings with Uber’s
chief executive and founder, Travis Kalanick, that were detailed in the files.
While
serving as economy minister, the former banker told the tech company he had
brokered a secret “deal” with a bitterly divided Socialist cabinet, then in
power.
Aurélien
Taché, a member of parliament who was elected for Macron’s party in 2017 but
re-elected this year as part of the leftwing opposition coalition, Nupes, told
France Info radio: “It’s almost like a bad thriller – meetings and rendezvous
that were hidden …” He said that the fact the company asked Macron for advice
during a raid on their offices by government inspectors must be investigated.
“It’s a state scandal,” he said.
Alain
Vidalies, who was the Socialist transport secretary at the time Uber was
attempting to establish itself in France, told France Info he was “gobsmacked”
by the extent of Macron’s support of Uber lobbying, particularly that Macron
had taken part in “quasi-secret” meetings with the company, which he called a
type of “complicity”. He said the French people had a right to “a response and
clarifications” from the executive.
Mathilde
Panot, the parliamentary leader of the hard-left opposition party France
Unbowed, denounced what she described as the “pillage of the country” during
Macron’s time as economy minister. She described Macron as a “lobbyist” for a
“US multinational aiming to permanently deregulate labour law”.
In a
parliament sitting on Monday afternoon, Panot referenced the Uber files while
presenting her party’s no-confidence vote in the prime minister, Élisabeth
Borne. Panot concluded by asking lawmakers if they agreed with Macron, whom she
called “the president of lobbyists” in his support of Uber.
Fabien
Roussel, leader of the French Communist party, described the revelations, which
were detailed in Le Monde, as devastating: “Against all our rules, all our
social laws and against workers’ rights.”
Members of
the lower house of the French parliament accepted that there was no
constitutional mechanism for them to question Macron directly on the content of
the Uber files, but opposition parties suggested it was important for
parliament committees to establish a way to investigate.
The head of
the leftwing CGT union, Philippe Martinez, said: “The minimum is that [Macron]
explains what he did and how he contributed not just to Uber establishing
itself in France but, thanks to a law called the ‘Macron law’, also contributed
to unpicking a part of the labour code in favour of this type of economic
activity with social consequences on workers.”
However,
Laurent Berger, head of the moderate CFDT union, said it was no surprise to
hear to what extent Uber had a “lobbying mindset” in order to “deregulate, to
make money by taking so little account of what exists in terms of law in
different countries, and above all in terms of workers’ rights”.
Jordan
Bardella, of the far-right National Rally party, said the revelations showed
that Macron’s career had “a common thread: to serve private interests, often
foreign, before national interests”.
The
president’s office told AFP that at that time Macron had, as economy minister,
“naturally” been in contact with “many companies involved in the profound
change in services that has occurred over the years mentioned, which should be
facilitated by unravelling certain administrative or regulatory locks”.
It was not
a secret that Macron was enthusiastic about US tech companies, who he saw as
outsiders and innovators. He once told Mediapart that banning Uber would have
been tantamount to sending unemployed youths from the rundown banlieues “back
there to sell drugs”.
But his
closeness to the cab-hailing firm has never been fully revealed. Macron showed
a “clear desire to work around the [new] Thévenoud legislation”, according to
Uber’s note of a meeting with the young economy minister about a law that
radically restricted the role of cab-hailing services.
Macron’s
support was crucial for Uber, as it ran into street protests from French taxi
drivers, who must do 300 hours of training and face a limited quota of
expensive taxi licenses.
Aurore
Bergé, the parliamentary leader of Macron’s centrist party, said Macron had
simply been doing his job and doing it well. She told CNews that Uber had
created a service that French people wanted and Macron had rightly facilitated
the arrival of companies that created jobs. On accusations of a secret deal,
she said: “There was no deal, there was no quid pro quo.”
.webp)
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário