French leader not yielding amid unrest over labor bill
PARIS — Tear gas briefly choked a Left Bank neighborhood and truckers blocked highways in Provence and Normandy in new tensions over a French labor bill Tuesday — but the president insisted that he won’t abandon the contested reform.
France is facing a tense week of strikes and other union action against the bill, which has met fierce resistance in Parliament and in the streets.
A peaceful march Tuesday by union members that wound through Paris’ tourist-heavy Montparnasse neighborhood was interrupted when masked protesters threw projectiles, including broken cafe chairs.
Riot police responded with tear gas that rose up in the surrounding streets. A bus stop was scrawled with graffiti in English reading “Tourist go home, refugees welcome.” The march later resumed.
Truck drivers joined in the protests Tuesday, blocking roads around Marseille and the western cities of Nantes and Le Mans. They fear a drop in income because the bill cuts overtime pay.
Marseille union leader Laurent Casanova said the goal “is to paralyze traffic ... and block the economy.” Truck driver John Bosco in Vitrolles, near Marseille, said the law could cut $1,130 to $1,700 from his annual income.
“I will not back down” on the bill, President Francois Hollande said Tuesday on Europe-1 radio, arguing that the new law is necessary to boost hiring and investment.
“There are too many governments that have backed down, which is why I found the country in such a state in 2012,” he said.
France’s economy has stagnated for years after successive governments tried reforms but failed or ceded to street protests.
Hollande insisted he supports the right to demonstrate despite a state of emergency still in place after last year’s deadly attacks in Paris. “That’s part of freedom,” he said.