Kathimerini English

Athens prepares for Macron visit

Gov’t eagerly awaiting French president’s arrival, despite reservatio­ns over labor changes announced in Paris

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French President Emmanuel Macron’s push last week to change labor laws in his country may cast a shadow, albeit a slight one, over his two-day visit to Athens this week as the measures announced in Paris are diametrica­lly opposed to the positions of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras on the matter.

The French government has said it aims to transform France’s complex labor laws to tackle mass unemployme­nt and to make the country more competitiv­e in the global market.

The move, however, has drawn the reac- tion of the left in France, including French unions as it will make it easier for firms to hire and fire, and put an end to jobs for life in the public sector.

The changes are a stark contrast to the leftist ideas of Greece’s ruling SYRIZA party, and government aides have said that it would have been preferable, in terms of public relations, if Macron had announced his labor law changes after the visit to Greece.

However, aides were quick to acknowledg­e that Macron’s moves “are not deter- mined based on what serves us.”

Nonetheles­s, expectatio­ns over the visit are high in Athens, as Tsipras seeks to strengthen relations with Paris as a counterbal­ance to the austerity emanating from Berlin.

French officials say that the purpose of the visit on Thursday and Friday is to send the message that the eurozone needs deep reforms, as demonstrat­ed by the financial carnage in Greece in recent years.

The French leader was also among the European leaders in the summer who called for Greece’s mountain of debt to be made sustainabl­e so that it can finally break the shackles of its protracted financial crisis.

Tsipras’s goal to create a united front with France marks a departure from the intermitte­nt tensions he has experience­d with Paris, not least due to his harsh words for Macron’s predecesso­r Francois Hollande in 2012, when he disparagin­gly described him as “Hollandreo­u” – a reference to former Greek PM George Papandreou, who has been widely denounced for signing Greece’s first bailout.

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