French labour unions fume as laws changed
French Socialist Prime Minister Manuel Valls on Tuesday bypassed Parliament to force through labour reforms that have sparked four months of strikes and street protests.
French Socialist Prime Minister Manuel Valls on Tuesday bypassed Parliament to force through labour reforms that have sparked four months of strikes and street protests.
“This country is too used to mass unemployment,” Mr Valls told Parliament as many members booed and several walked out of the chamber.
He said a “coalition of immobility” had stymied the reforms, which aim at reducing unemployment by freeing up the job market — notably by making it easier for employers to hire and fire staff.
It was the second time the embattled government used the so-called 49-3 provision for this package of reforms, as it could not count on the votes of legislators on the Socialist Party’s left flank.
It used the same measure to force a package of economic reforms through Parliament in 2015, also to prevent the rebel left flank of the party from sinking it.
The labour bill now continues on its bicameral shuttle.
It returns to the Senate before its definitive adoption by the lower house on July 22 — when Mr Valls is expected to again resort to the 49-3 manoeuvre for the final step.
In the streets meanwhile, protesters staged their 12th show of opposition to the controversial package, seen as too pro-business and a threat to cherished workers’ rights. However the numbers were down from previous protests.
A Paris protest drew up to 7,500 people according to the police and 45,000 according to the hardline CGT union. Demonstrations peaked on March 31 at 390,000 people across the country, according to official figures, while the unions claim the figure was 1.2 million. Unemployment in France stands at a stubborn 10 per cent overall, but for young people the figure is closer to 25 per cent.
Union- and student-backed demonstrations against the reforms began nearly four months ago, with some protests descending into violence.
MPs have 24 hours to decide whether to call a vote of no confidence in Mr Valls’ government, which the right-wing Opposition has already ruled out.
The government survived a vote of no-confidence by a comfortable margin over its use of the 49-3 clause in May.
On Tuesday the head of the Republicans’ parliamentary group, Christian Jacob, said the centre-right party would not call such a vote this time around.
Union- and student-backed demonstrations against the reforms began in early March.
