Macron prepares response to ‘yellow vest’ protesters
PARIS (Reuters) — French President Emmanuel Macron was scheduled to address France yesterday as he sought to placate “yellow vest” anti-government protesters who wreaked havoc in the country’s capital over the weekend.
The Élysée Palace on Sunday said Macron, elected in May 2017, would address the country on Monday at 8 p.m. Paris time.
The president was to meet with trade unions, employers’ organizations and local officials as he tried to formulate a response to an unstructured movement that has taken France by storm and broken through traditional political and trade union communication channels with the government.
Labor Minister Muriel Penicaud said on LCI television that Macron would announce “concrete and immediate” measures, but that this would not include boosting the minimum wage.
“Increasing the minimum wage would destroy jobs. Many small businesses cannot afford it and risk going bankrupt,” Penicaud said.
Government spokesman Benjamin Griveaux warned against unrealistic expectations.
“Not all the problems of the yellow vest protesters will be solved by waving a magic wand,” Griveaux said.
On Sunday, workers in Paris and other cities swept up broken glass and towed away burnt-out cars while the government warned of slower economic growth and the judiciary said it would come down hard on looting and attacks on police.
On Saturday, protesters, for the fourth weekend in a row, threw stones, torched cars and vandalized shops and restaurants in a protest against Macron’s economic policies.
‘Fight ‘til Easter’
Demonstrators were unimpressed with the French government’s overtures, continuing their blockade of traffic roundabouts nationwide and vowing to fight on.
“I will stay here until Easter, if necessary,” a protester called Didier told BFM television in Frejus, southern France.
Macron’s last televised address was on Nov. 27, when he said he would not be bounced into changing policy by “thugs.”
Since then, he canceled a planned rise in fuel taxes to try to defuse the situation but the protests have morphed into a broader anti-Macron rebellion.
The upheaval in the Christmas shopping season has dealt a heavy blow to retailing, tourism and manufacturing as road blocks disrupt supply chains.
On Saturday, the Eiffel Tower and several museums closed their doors for security reasons, as did top Paris department stores on what should have been a prime shopping weekend.
The protest movement would have “a severe impact” on the economy, Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire said as he toured a heavily looted central Paris neighborhood.
“We must expect a new slowdown of economic growth at yearend,” he said.
In mid-November, the central bank had forecast 0.4-percent fourth-quarter growth. Economists said at that time that the economy would need to grow at 0.8 percent in the final three months to hit the government’s 1.7 percent annual growth forecast.
‘Give back the money’
Authorities said 136,000 people had taken part in protests across France on Saturday, including 10,000 in Paris. More than 1,709 had been arrested, of which 1,000 were in Paris. More than 100 remained in custody.
“We cannot let people think they can come to trash everything and then happily go back home without facing judicial sanctions,” Paris prosecutor Remy Heitz told reporters.
Across the city, banks, toy shops, opticians and other retail outlets had boarded up storefronts smashed by protesters.
“You won’t make it past Christmas, Emmanuel,” the graffiti on a boarded-up shop near the Champs Élysées read.