The Borneo Post

Macron to set out fix for ‘yellow vest’ anger

-

PARIS: France’s Emmanuel Macron aims to kickstart a new chapter in his presidency on Monday with a series of policy announceme­nts based on a major voter listening exercise launched in response to the ‘yellow vest’ revolt.

Macron will give a speech at 1800 GMT setting out the “first concrete measures” to be taken in response to the grievances aired at over 10,000 townhall- style meetings between January and March or posted online, the presidency told AFP.

One of Macron’s aides told AFP that the country could look forward to “a new act” in his nearly-two-year- old presidency, marked by “profound changes” aimed at drawing the line under five months of often violent antigovern­ment protests.

The task of trying to satisfy the many, sometimes competing demands emanating from the ‘Grand National Debate’ will be a tricky one for the 41-year- old leader, whose reform drive was abruptly knocked off course by the yellow vests.

Summing up the weight of anticipati­on on Macron’s shoulders Senate leader Gerard Larcher, a member of the opposition Republican­s, told Le Figaro newspaper on Saturday: “He won’t get a second chance.”

The yellow vest movement, so called for the fluorescen­t jackets worn by demonstrat­ors, began in rural and small-town France over fuel taxes and quickly snowballed into a broader anti-capitalist, antiestabl­ishment rebellion.

In January, Macron launched a series of debates to try to take the heat out of the protests.

Between January 15 and March 15, nearly 500,000 people took part in 10,134 meetings in community halls across the country, with hundreds of thousands more filling out questionna­ires or offering up unprompted suggestion­s on the official debate website.

Macron, who criss- crossed the country to engage local mayors and residents in marathon discussion­s, promised the French at the outset of the process to “transform anger into solutions” afterwards.

But as they returned to the streets of Paris and other cities Saturday for their 22nd straight week of protests, many yellow vests dismissed whatever he had to offer.

“Great National Debate, great blah blah,” and “Macron, we expect nothing from your announceme­nts” read some of the banners waved by protestors in Paris.

Interior ministry figures put the number of demonstrat­ors at 31,000 on Saturday, a far cry from the 282,000 that took part in the first edition, but up from 22,300 a week before. — AFP

 ??  ?? A woman with an armband showing a triangle emblem bearing a ‘P’ for the country of origin Poland throws a rose into a lake during an event to commemorat­e the 74th anniversar­y of the Ravensbrue­ck Nazi concentrat­ion camp liberation in Ravensbrue­ck near Fuerstenbe­rg, northeaste­rn Germany. — AFP photo
A woman with an armband showing a triangle emblem bearing a ‘P’ for the country of origin Poland throws a rose into a lake during an event to commemorat­e the 74th anniversar­y of the Ravensbrue­ck Nazi concentrat­ion camp liberation in Ravensbrue­ck near Fuerstenbe­rg, northeaste­rn Germany. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia