Business Day

French protesters on the march

- AGENCY STAFF

THOUSANDS of people took to the streets of Paris on Tuesday in the latest protest march in a marathon campaign against the French Socialist government’s job market reforms.

THOUSANDS of people took to the streets of Paris on Tuesday in the latest protest march in a marathon campaign against the French Socialist government’s job market reforms.

The march, along with a strike that shut down the Eiffel Tower, came as the French senate prepared to vote on the hotly contested reforms aimed at reining in unemployme­nt by freeing up the job market.

Seven unions on Tuesday submitted what they called partial results from a public survey on the draft law, with 92% of 700,000 respondent­s calling for its withdrawal.

French President Francois Hollande said last week that his government would “go all the way” to enact the reforms, which are seen by critics as too probusines­s and a threat to cherished workers’ rights.

“It is essential not only to allow businesses to be able to hire more” but to step up training that would lead to more jobs, he said.

Prime Minister Manuel Valls will meet union leaders on Wednesday and Thursday but has already signalled he was not open to modifying a text that had already been watered down.

Valls, who has been a lightning rod for criticism because of his unrelentin­g stance on the reforms, conceded little by agreeing to the meetings.

The reforms are seen by critics as too pro-business and a threat to workers’ rights

His office said they would “review” the situation but “it is not a matter of reopening a cycle of negotiatio­ns.”

Philippe Martinez, secretary general of the CGT union, said he hoped the meeting would not be a mere “courtesy call just to have a coffee”.

Unions say the main sticking point is a measure giving precedence to agreements negotiated between companies and their staff over deals reached with unions across entire sectors — notably on working hours.

Tuesday afternoon saw the 11th demonstrat­ion against the reforms since the wave of protests began on March 9. At least 24 arrests were made ahead of the march from the historic Place de la Bastille across the Seine to the Place d’Italie in southern Paris.

The right-dominated senate was to vote in the early evening on its version of the labour reform bill, which is tougher on workers’ rights than the lower house version.

The senate wants to scrap the 35-hour work week and restore a cap on the amount employers would have to pay out when they lose labour disputes. The bill will then return to the National Assembly on July 5.

In May the government used a constituti­onal manoeuvre to push the bill through the lower house without a vote in the face of opposition from Socialist backbenche­rs.

With the two chambers unlikely to agree a final version, the lower house will have the final say, and the government is expected to use the same manoeuvre to pass the bill into law without a vote.

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