Macron blames far right for chaotic farmers’ fair
in Paris
Police and protesters clashed as French president
visited the annual agricultural show in a tense atmosphere.
Since the start of the farmers' protests in January,
the French government focused its efforts on trying to ensure the fair would
run smoothly |
FEBRUARY
24, 2024 6:44 PM CET
BY VICTOR
GOURY-LAFFONT
https://www.politico.eu/article/emmanuel-macron-blame-far-right-chaotic-farmer-fair/
PARIS —
French President Emmanuel Macron accused protesters of seeking chaos and
pushing the agenda of the far-right National Rally on Saturday, as violent
clashes between riot police and disgruntled farmers punctuated the Paris
International Agricultural Show.
Since the
start of the farmers' protests in January, the French government focused its
efforts on ensuring smooth running for the Salon — an annual weeklong event
showcasing France’s farmland and usually attended by upwards of half a million
people.
Macron and
his government pulled out all the stops to portray themselves as friends of the
farming industry and made a series of policy announcements over the course of a
month in an effort to appease the agricultural anger, including by softening
anti-pesticide regulation at the request of farmers' unions.
These
efforts, however, proved unsuccessful. Protesters stormed through the fair’s
doors before its opening as the president was having breakfast with the head of
the farmers’ unions. Police pushed back and sprayed tear gas to avoid a direct
confrontation between Macron and the protesters, as crowd movements resulted in
several falls and knocked over animal enclosures.
Talking to
reporters, Macron said protesters "were not helping any of [their]
colleagues by smashing up exhibition booths." The president set up an ad
hoc discussion with unionized farmers, less than 24 hours after cancelling a
debate that was originally supposed to also include environmentalist
organizations and agro-industry representatives.
The farmers
surrounded Macron, accompanied by Agriculture Minister Marc Fesneau and junior
minister Agnès Pannier-Runacher, with participants forming a small circle
around the president as electricity filled the room. Participants restated
points often made since the start of the protests: complaints about
over-regulation, low wages, stringent environmental rules, and foreign produce,
particularly coming from Ukraine, creating unfair conditions for French
farmers. One farmer showed the president the state of his bank account on his
phone; another said he had contemplated committing suicide due to the hardships
he faced.
'A project of degrowth and stupidity'
“We can’t
say French agriculture is screwed,” Macron said, speaking out against
“dooms-day rhetoric” while acknowledging some of the difficulties facing the
owners of small farming businesses. The French president answered the questions
raised point by point but was visibly on edge and showed his discontent when
interrupted and jeered for his responses on issues including Ukraine and the
European Union.
Macron said
he would fight to have the EU impose rules that imported Ukrainian products be
subjected to the same conditions as those applied within the bloc. He also said
his government would look into implementing a floor price for producers.
Macron
spoke bluntly, adopting informal language and expletives during his discussion
— a method of straight-talking communication he has often opted for since the
start of his presidency. “I wasn’t born yesterday; I know where some of the
protesters are coming from,” Macron said, regretting “political manipulation,”
which he seemed to pin on the far-right National Rally party.
Macron
described the National Rally’s positions on agriculture as a “project of
degrowth and stupidity.”
“France’s
agriculture needs Europe,” he stressed on multiple occasions.
Jordan
Bardella, the National Rally’s lead candidate in the upcoming European
election, responded by calling Macron “the main advocate for the Green Deal,
which reduces yields and livestock numbers.” Bardella also said the president
suffered from “a dangerous and worrying schizophrenia,” in a post on X.
“Macron’s
presence here wasn’t asked for: he’s taunting us,” Amélie Rebière, a local
representative for the hardline Coordination Rurale union, told POLITICO.
“We’re tired of false promises. It’s not our job to make things go smoothly for
the president.”
As has been
tradition since Jacques Chirac’s presidency in 2002, Macron walked through the
fair meeting with local producers, but he did so under heavy security
apparatus, which kept visitors at a distance as boos and calls for the
president to resign were heard throughout his visit.
Bardella,
currently polling more than 10 percentage points ahead of Macron’s camp in
polling for the European election, will attend the fair on Sunday, in what is
expected to be a much less chaotic visit.
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