The Columbus Dispatch

French protests present problem for Macron government

- By Adam Nossiter

A demonstrat­or waves the French flag with the Arc de Triomphe in the background as a barricade burns on the Champs-Elysees during protests Saturday in Paris.

PARIS — Shouts of “Macron resign!” and “Macron get lost!” punctuated the booms from tear gas and water cannons on the Champs-Elysees on Saturday as French police forced protesters from the “Yellow Jackets” movement away from the presidenti­al offices in the elysee Palace.

Welling up rapidly from rural and forgotten France, this broad-based, citizendri­ven movement is among the most serious challenges yet to President Emmanuel Macron’s pro-business government, say analysts, political opponents and even many of Macron’s supporters.

On Saturday, thousands of Yellow Jackets, named for the fluorescen­t road-safety vests that all French drivers must carry in their vehicles, converged on Paris for a second weekend to protest a rise in fuel taxes and to express general discontent with the fiscal burden in one of the most highly taxed states in Europe, where taxes represent over 45 percent of GDP.

The numbers had dropped sharply from the preceding week’s several hundred thousand protesters; police estimated there were about 8,000 in Paris and more than 80,000 across the country Saturday.

Clouds of gas and smoke rolled up the ChampsElys­ees all afternoon as police battled militant members of the crowd wielding paving stones; the grassroots protesters insisted they were unconnecte­d with their movement.

“We’re just fed up. It seems like to us that the government is only working to maintain its own privileges,” said Mathieu Styrna, one of the thousands marching. A contractor, he said he had been forced to drive hundreds of miles a week for work and could no longer afford his gas bills.

It is the movement’s amorphousn­ess that makes it new, powerful and potentiall­y dangerous for Macron, analysts say.

“The government parties didn’t understand that their tax policies would wind up producing this,” said Dominique Reynie, a political scientist at Sciences Po, pointing out that the tax burden had grown by about 25 billion euros every year between 2002 and 2017.

No high-ranking official has met with any of the self-designated spokespeop­le for the movement, who have been appearing on French television all week. There have been a few small fiscal gestures — promises of checks and rebates — but these were dismissed by Saturday’s protesters as irrelevant to their daily struggle.

 ?? [MICHEL EULER/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ??
[MICHEL EULER/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS]

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States