Orlando Sentinel

Macron scraps fuel tax hike amid fears of more violence

- By Sylvie Corbet, Samuel Petrequin and Angela Charlton

PARIS — French President Emmanuel Macron scrapped a fuel tax rise Wednesday amid fears of new violence, after weeks of nationwide protests and the worst rioting in Paris in decades.

Protesters celebrated the victory, but some said Macron’s surrender came too late and is no longer enough to quell the mounting anger at the president, whom they consider out of touch with the problems of ordinary people.

Macron decided Wednesday to “get rid” of the tax planned for next year, an official in the president’s office told The Associated Press. Prime Minister Edouard Philippe told lawmakers the tax is no longer included in the 2019 budget.

The decision has ramificati­ons beyond France, since the fuel tax rise was part of Macron’s efforts to wean France off fossil fuels in order to reduce greenhouse gases and help slow climate change. Its withdrawal is both a blow to broader efforts to fight climate change and a warning to other world leaders trying to do the same thing.

The “yellow vest” protests began Nov. 17 over the government plan to raise taxes on diesel and gasoline, but by the time Macron bowed to three weeks of violence and abandoned the new fuel tax, protesters were demanding much more. Many workers in France are angry over the combinatio­n of low wages, high taxes and high unemployme­nt that have left many people struggling financiall­y.

On Tuesday, the government agreed to suspend the fuel tax rise for six months. But instead of appeasing the protesters, it spurred other groups to join in, hoping for concession­s of their own. The protests took on an even bigger dimension Wednesday with trade unions and farmers vowing to join the fray.

Police warned of potential violence during demonstrat­ions in Paris on Saturday, with one small security forces union threatenin­g a strike.

So after nightfall Wednesday, as parliament debated the 2019 budget, Macron’s government gave in.

“I have no problem with admitting that on such or such question we could have done differentl­y, that if there is such a level of anger it’s because we still have a lot of things to improve,” the prime minister told legislator­s.

Philippe said “the tax is now abandoned” in the 2019 budget, and the government is “ready for dialogue.” The budget can be renegotiat­ed through the year, but given the scale of the recent protests, Macron is unlikely to revive the added fuel tax idea anytime soon.

Three weeks of protests have caused four deaths, injured hundreds and littered central Paris with burned cars and shattered windows.

One activist said he fears more deaths if Saturday’s yellow vest demonstrat­ion goes ahead and urged Macron to calm the nation.

“If not there will be chaos,” said Christophe Chalencon, a 52-year-old blacksmith from southern France. He said the French public needs Macron to “admit he made a mistake, with simple words that touch the guts and heart of the French.”

 ?? BOB EDME/AP ?? A demonstrat­or wearing a yellow vest reading “Macron give us the wealth tax” protests Wednesday at the toll gates on a motorway in southweste­rn France.
BOB EDME/AP A demonstrat­or wearing a yellow vest reading “Macron give us the wealth tax” protests Wednesday at the toll gates on a motorway in southweste­rn France.

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