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Macron takes aim at pension reform, lawmakers in campaign manifesto

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PARIS: Presidenti­al challenger Emmanuel Macron on Thursday said he would root out inequaliti­es in France's pension system, sell government stakes in major firms and downsize parliament as he sought to silence critics who say his bid is thin on substance.

Macron, a former investment banker running as an independen­t centrist, is favorite to win the unpredicta­ble race in a May runoff against far-right leader Marine Le Pen.

Macron owes some of his status as frontrunne­r to a financial scandal plaguing his other main rival, conservati­ve Francois Fillon. On Wednesday Fillon promised to “fight to the end” as he revealed he would be placed under formal investigat­ion over the alleged misuse of public funds.

“The society I want will be both free of constraint­s and blockages and protective of the weakest,” Macron said as he unveiled his campaign manifesto.

He took aim at Fillon’s declared admiration for the union-bashing British former prime minister Margaret Thatcher, and at his plans to cut half a million public sector jobs, saying that “The future of France is not a set of Britishsty­le reforms from the eighties.”

Neverthele­ss, several of Macron’s own reforms will be controvers­ial in a country of powerful interest groups, and which faces a feeble economic recovery and high unemployme­nt which critics say he failed to tackle as economy minister.

While France’s government has traditiona­lly held large stakes in companies of national stature, Macron said he would sell up to 10 billion euros ($10.55 billion) worth of shares in groups in which the state does not hold a majority.

Candidates on the left are opposed to such moves.

The money raised will be put in a “Fund for Industry and Innovation” to finance future projects, which may include dividends from the companies he declined to name rather than outright sales of stakes, he said at the conference.

Macron, who last week outlined a broad economic plan mixing tax cuts, a reduction in government jobs and higher investment­s, said he wanted to smooth out big difference­s between the pensions of government employees and those in the private sector, while keeping the pension age at 62. Fillon would raise the pension age. Le Pen would cut it.

In contrast with past government­s’ refusal to engage in American-inspired “positive discrimina­tion,” Macron said he would give companies who hire people from 200 designated poor neighborho­ods a 15,000 euros bonus over three years.

 ??  ?? Independen­t centrist presidenti­al candidate Emmanuel Macron addresses the media during a press conference held in Paris Thursday. (AP)
Independen­t centrist presidenti­al candidate Emmanuel Macron addresses the media during a press conference held in Paris Thursday. (AP)

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