Kuwait Times

Street protests, a French tradition par excellence

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Since the Revolution more than two centuries ago, burning barricades and street protests have been a feature of French political life - and experts say President Emmanuel Macron has had his first taste of their power. Jogging through one of the poshest districts of Paris last weekend, 33-year-old Belgian Augustin Terlinden suddenly found himself faceto-face with a car going up in flames. “Evidently the revolution­ary tradition is still very much alive in France,” he said with a smile.

Some 200 cars were torched and more than 400 people arrested during the “yellow vest” demonstrat­ions on Saturday, the worst clashes in the capital in decades. “Paris is burning,” read headlines in the internatio­nal press. What started in mid-November as road blockades over fuel taxes has spiralled into violent protests against Macron, seen by demonstrat­ors as out of touch with ordinary people.

On Tuesday, in a bid to quell the demonstrat­ions, his government announced the fuel tax hikes would be suspended for six months. It was an unpreceden­ted U-turn from a president who previously vowed he would not be swayed. Abroad, some observers have been tempted to see in the protests confirmati­on that rebellion is something that simply runs in French blood. Swiss newspaper Le Temps described France, which executed its king in an ultimate act of antielitis­m in 1793, as a “country which has always given in to temptation­s of violence”.

is not a particular­ly French tradition,” he said. “But it’s true that France has a tradition of collective mobilizati­on which has given rise to a sentiment that ‘the state must listen to us, one way or another’.” When he came to power in May 2017, Macron vowed that protests would not blow him off course in his bid to dynamize the French economy and attract investment.

Mass demonstrat­ions plagued the five-year term of his Socialist predecesso­r Francois Hollande, who was forced by protests to abandon a so-called “eco tax” on heavy goods vehicles. But the French penchant for refusing to take government policy lying down has far deeper roots. Published four years after the Revolution erupted, the 1793 constituti­on safeguarde­d a “right to insurrecti­on” against any government that was not listening to the people. While that constituti­on is long gone, “the idea is still there,” Pigenet said. Protests ‘get results’

Olivier Cahn, a professor at the University of Tours, said the tradition has taken root because protests “often get results” in France. After the momentous May 1968 protests which rocked French society - and left several dead - the government raised the minimum wage by a third. In 1986, reforms denounced by critics as introducin­g selective university education were axed after the death of a student. And in 2006, violent protests prompted the government to scrap a new type of job contract, which was intended to make hiring easier but was seen by critics as increasing economic insecurity.

On the other hand, top-down protests organized by trade unions have often fizzled in recent years, like the mass demonstrat­ions in 2016 which failed to kill off labor reforms. “There is a growing movement which wants more violent methods than those led by the unions, which are considered a bit humdrum,” said Erik Neveu, a sociologis­t at the Sciences Po Rennes university. That may help explain why public support for the “yellow vests” has remained fairly high despite its increasing violence.

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