(…)“Watching all this with delight is the far
right. The left does stand to make some electoral gains from the crisis,
especially as the leaders are unions supported by leftist parliamentarians. But
it is the likes of the Rassemblement National that are best poised to take
advantage. Marine Le Pen has successfully “de-demonised” her party over recent
years, and made her personal brand of cat-loving nationalism appear softer to
voters (in part because her rhetoric has spread across the spectrum). However,
the dangerous implications of a far-right victory remain clear. Her plan, had
she won in 2022, included a proposal that could have given her an instant
parliamentary supermajority. Voting preference polling this far from an
election is of limited use, but a spate of recent polls suggest that Le Pen has
seen a boost from all this chaos.”
There’s only one winner from Macron’s hardline
response to pension protests: the far right
Oliver
Haynes
In pushing through with this unpopular reform, the
French president is doing the groundwork for Marine Le Pen
Wed 12 Apr
2023 14.45 BST
It’s been a
great few months for the rats of Paris. As they’ve grown fat, feasting on
rubbish in the streets, citizens have been struggling to catch a train and
facing fuel shortages at the pumps. Tomorrow, another rolling strike of refuse
collectors will start and the streets of the capital will again fill with the
pungent aroma of social conflict.
President
Emmanuel Macron, meanwhile, is missing in action, hiding in the Élysée Palace
or travelling abroad. A recent front page of the left-leaning Libération
newspaper declared that he was becoming increasingly out of touch with the
people.
If
anything, the accusation is too kind. Macron has been playing a dangerous game
with French democracy, particularly since his use of article 49.3 of the
constitution to pass a pension reform without parliamentary support. These
reforms, which will raise the age at which people can claim state pension from
62 to 64, remain highly unpopular, while the various social and trade union-led
movements to oppose them command high levels of support.
The most
recent polls show that 68% of the public remain opposed to the reforms and 67%
support the movement contesting them, while a further 11% are nonplussed. This
week, France’s constitutional council is expected to rule on whether the reform
is struck down or not.
So who is Macron doing this for?
He insists
it is in the general interest, that with an ageing population the system has
become unsustainable and that it must be done now because the longer France
waits, the more the system will degrade. Opponents argue that tax cuts he made
in 2021, if reversed, could pay for the current pension shortfall. What’s clear
is that, electorally, his actions are pleasing only a minority, what French
economists Bruno Amable and Stefano Palombarini call the “bourgeois bloc”: the
affluent middle to upper class, roughly the 27% of the electorate that voted for
Macron in the first round of the 2022 presidential elections.
While life
on the inside of the bourgeois bloc might be pleasant enough to consider two
more years’ work to be no big deal, the outlook for others is not so rosy. Take
Laura, who works as a signaller on France’s train network, (though she is
currently on strike with her union, Sud Rail). I spoke to Laura on the phone
after she had finished a day’s picketing. She told me how she often works
weekends and bank holidays, at night, or early in the morning, with her
schedule changing constantly. Many of her colleagues are “broken by the job,
well before the age of 64”, she said.
In her
view, this is about more than pension reform, with many people in the wider
social movement pushed to protest by their experiences of inflation or precarious
work – and the sense that this reform could be the thin end of the wedge. The
stakes are high: it’s fair to say the president’s actions are weakening the
public’s already shaky trust in French democracy.
It’s not
just article 49.3. Police violence has been an astonishing theme of French
politics in recent years. During the “yellow vest” protests, one woman was
killed by police and hundreds were injured, including dozens losing eyes or
hands. Recent protests over reservoirs in Sainte-Soline, near Poitiers, left
two protesters in a coma after police allegedly deployed military-grade
weaponry, using more than 5,000 teargas canisters in two hours. Two men at
pension reform protests have lost testicles, a woman has lost a thumb and a
19-year-old I recently interviewed believes he was deliberately run over by
police who chased him on motorbikes. (The police dispute this account.)
Violence has been used against trade unionists, protesters, reporters and even
politicians, like the France Insoumise MP Antoine Léaument who was hit by a
teargas canister while watching protests from across the road.
Then
there’s the rhetoric: Macron’s interior minister, Gérald Darmanin, has embraced
a Trumpian register, declaring war on “far-left intellectual terrorism” and threatening
to cut subsidies to the Human Rights League NGO for its criticism of police
violence.
Watching
all this with delight is the far right. The left does stand to make some
electoral gains from the crisis, especially as the leaders are unions supported
by leftist parliamentarians. But it is the likes of the Rassemblement National
that are best poised to take advantage. Marine Le Pen has successfully
“de-demonised” her party over recent years, and made her personal brand of
cat-loving nationalism appear softer to voters (in part because her rhetoric
has spread across the spectrum). However, the dangerous implications of a
far-right victory remain clear. Her plan, had she won in 2022, included a
proposal that could have given her an instant parliamentary supermajority.
Voting preference polling this far from an election is of limited use, but a spate
of recent polls suggest that Le Pen has seen a boost from all this chaos.
Both of
Macron’s election victories were met with cheers from liberals. He was supposed
to be the bulwark against the far right but, if events continue along this
path, he may well end up helping it to power.
Oliver Haynes is a freelance journalist and
was highly commended in the Guardian Foundation’s Hugo Young award for
political opinion writing 2021


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