The Citizen (Gauteng)

Vote-chasing in a doomed factory

LE PEN, MACRON COURT WORKERS AT TUMBLE DRYER MANUFACTUR­ER FOR SUPPORT

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The fires of protest are still burning at the doomed French tumble-dryer factory where centrist presidenti­al candidate Emmanuel Macron and his far-right rival Marine Le Pen, staged a dramatic battle last week for workers’ votes.

Black ash from a stack of smoulderin­g tyres falls like snow on workers picketing outside the Whirlpool plant in Amiens over the company’s plans to move their jobs to Poland.

It was here that the battle lines in the presidenti­al run-off were drawn, when Le Pen – who has run as the candidate of the dispossess­ed – upstaged Macron by making a surprise whirlwind visit to the picket line as Macron was meeting unions to discuss the plant’s future.

The pro-EU Macron arrived afterwards, mobbed by the workers who initially booed him, but he eventually managed to turn the situation around and engage them in dialogue about the pros and cons of globalisat­ion.

For the workers, the dust-up between Le Pen and Macron – over which the two candidates traded blows in Wednesday’s TV debate – was a zero-sum game.

“They came looking for votes and to make promises. It was a publicity stunt,” Corinne Bizet, one of the 290 Whirlpool workers whose jobs are on the line, said Wednesday.

The announceme­nt in January that Whirlpool was moving production to the Polish city of Lodz was a blow for Amiens, a city of 130 000 people in northern France still reeling from the loss of 1 100 jobs at a Goodyear tyre factory in 2014.

Like many of the workers, Bizet has spent nearly two decades at the plant, where she met her husband. At 49, she now fears being left on the jobs shelf.

Standing in the car park, a besuited Macron attempted to convince the strikers that, far from protecting factory jobs, Le Pen’s proposals to pull France out of the EU would deter new investment.

“The man has no heart. He only came here because she came,” said Bizet, a chatty mother of three with plum hair and a small stud earring under her lower lip.

But while praising Le Pen as “closer to the people”, Bizet expressed misgivings about Le Pen’s proposal to leave the EU and dump the euro after a period of negotiatio­ns. “Le Pen thinks that will turn France around but there’s no magic wand,” she said with an air of resignatio­n.

Globalisat­ion has dominated the most divisive French election in decades, with a string of factory closures fuelling fury with Europe and mainstream politics.

On Wednesday, Le Pen, who has pushed a French-first approach to jobs and trade, accused Macron of hanging out workers to dry with a “survival of the fittest” approach.

“Your strategy is to tell lots of lies, you don’t propose anything,” Macron retorted, charging that Le Pen – who floated the prospect of investing state money to save the Whirlpool plant – of peddling “rubbish”.

David Gallopin, a line manager at Whirlpool, said he had gone from “zero percent convinced to 50 percent convinced” by Macron after his visit to the factory.

The 39-year-old politician cited an export-led Procter & Gamble detergent plant employing over 1 000 people just five kilometres away from Whirlpool in Amiens as an argument against protection­ism.

“Without leaving Europe, there are things we need to change,” said Gallopin, a softly-spoken 49-year-old whose son works at P&G.

“If we can’t stop companies offshoring, we have to ensure they don’t leave people by the wayside when they leave,” he argued.

Addressing the gathering outside Amiens town hall, centrist mayor Brigitte Foure expressed understand­ing for the frustratio­n of the Whirlpool workers. “But this anger must not lead to a vote of revolt on behalf of the far right,” she urged. –

 ?? Picture: EPA ?? THE FIREBRAND. French presidenti­al election candidate the the far-right Front National party, Marine Le Pen, delivers a speech during an outdoor campaign rally in Ennemain, Northern France.
Picture: EPA THE FIREBRAND. French presidenti­al election candidate the the far-right Front National party, Marine Le Pen, delivers a speech during an outdoor campaign rally in Ennemain, Northern France.
 ?? Picture: Reuters ?? THE MAN. Emmanuel Macron, head of the political movement En Marche!, or Onwards!, and candidate for the 2017 presidenti­al election, speaks with supporters at the restaurant Bowling in Rodez.
Picture: Reuters THE MAN. Emmanuel Macron, head of the political movement En Marche!, or Onwards!, and candidate for the 2017 presidenti­al election, speaks with supporters at the restaurant Bowling in Rodez.
 ?? Picture: Reuters ?? HER PEOPLE. Marine Le Pen, French National Front candidate, attends a ‘people’s party’ with supporters in Ennemain, northern France, on Thursday.
Picture: Reuters HER PEOPLE. Marine Le Pen, French National Front candidate, attends a ‘people’s party’ with supporters in Ennemain, northern France, on Thursday.
 ?? Picture: Reuters ?? HEAR ME. Emmanuel Macron, candidate for the 2017 presidenti­al election, speaks to labour union employees.
Picture: Reuters HEAR ME. Emmanuel Macron, candidate for the 2017 presidenti­al election, speaks to labour union employees.

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