The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Climate activists nab portraits, divide judges

- By Nicolas VauxMontag­ny

Is stealing a presidenti­al portrait a prison-worthy crime? Or a laudable act of civil disobedien­ce?

LYON, FRANCE >> Is stealing a presidenti­al portrait a prisonwort­hy crime? Or a laudable act of civil disobedien­ce?

Courts around France are grappling with this question in response to an unusual new environmen­tal movement that’s aiming to push French President Emmanuel Macron to do more to fight climate change.

One by one, environmen­tal activists around France have removed Macron’s official portraits from more than 130 town halls this year, from the foothills of the Alps to the Left Bank of Paris.

Their point: Even as Macron portrays himself on the global stage as Mr. Climate, the centrist, business-friendly president isn’t acting boldly enough to change his own country’s planet-damaging ways. They’re notably angry that France has lagged on its internatio­nal commitment­s to increase use of renewable energy and reduce emissions. France remains well behind its European neighbors in its use of renewable energy.

The portrait-removers have been facing trials around the country , with some fined, others acquitted. An appeals trial of the first court case was held last week in Lyon with the ruling still pending, and a new trial is scheduled later this month.

The protesters don’t fit a single mold — one’s a math teacher, another works for the SNCF national rail company, another’s an organic vegetable farmer.

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