|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: France
France: Millions join one-day strike against pension cuts
By a WSWS reporting team
13 June 2003
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
French government workers, joined by sections of private-sector
employees, disrupted or halted public transport, the postal service
and other basic services in a massive one-day strike on June 10.
The strikethe third such one-day labour mobilisation in
the past monthwas called to coincide with the opening of
debate in the National Assembly on the governments bill
to slash pension benefits for millions of workers.

The measure would require government employees to work 40 years
before retirement, rather than the 37.5 years required now. This
would be further extended after 2009 to 42 years. The impact on
pension benefits is estimated to be a reduction of 30 percent
or more.
Tuesdays action was called by all of the main trade union
federations with the exception of the CFDT (French Democratic
Confederation of Labour), which has signed onto the pension reform
drafted by the right-centre government of President Jacques Chirac
and Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin. The CFDT is traditionally
linked to the right wing of the Socialist Party. The CGT (General
Confederation of Labour), which has long-standing ties to the
Communist Party, and the FO (Workers Power), which has links
with the Socialist Party, are officially opposing the government
measure.
Postal workers, rail workers, state bank employees, telecommunications
operators, nurses, teachers, gas and electricity workers, and
employees in justice, defence and customs offices joined in the
nationwide strike. Police officers also participated.
Traffic in Paris was virtually paralysed, and traffic jams
stretched for miles outside of the capital due to the crippling
impact of the strike on public transport. Urban transport was
disrupted in many other towns and cities as well, including Marseilles,
where the shutdown was near total. Internal air transportation
was much reduced.
In numerous towns, rubbish had not been collected for several
days. Many newspapers did not appear, and some radio and TV stations
were disrupted.
Well over 30 percent of teachers in primary and secondary schools
participated in the strike. Education employees are very much
at the forefront of the strike movement, as they are also fighting
staff cuts and plans to transfer 110,000 non-teaching staff from
the national public education service to local government jurisdiction.
Thousands of teachers, joined by railwaymen and other sections
of workers, have been on continuous strike for a month, and some
since early March.
An estimated 200,000 people demonstrated in both and Paris
and Marseilles, although police and union estimates vary widely.
Some 50 towns had demonstrations of more than 5,000 people, with
as many as 50,000 in Toulouse, Clermont-Ferrand, Grenoble, Montpellier
and Rouen; 8,000 rallied in Amiens.
The huge Paris demonstration went from the Place de la Bastille
to the Place de la Concorde and comprised all age groups, from
school and university students to a wide range of adult workers
from the public and private sectors. The largest contingents were
teachers, but many workers from the tax offices, the EDF-GDF (public
electricity and gas sector) and other departments were in evidence.
Large groups marched with the banners and flags of the FSU (the
main education federation), the CGT and other unions.
Despite the disruption caused by the strikes, the government
workers have broad support in the general population. A poll published
June 7 by Le Figaro reported that 66 percent of respondents
supported or sympathised with the strikers.
While officially supporting the strike movement, the CGT and
FO leadership have been working assiduously to limit its scope
and head off a more generalised mobilisation that would pose a
direct political challenge to the Chirac-Raffarin government.
The centre-right coalition has a large majority of deputies in
the National Assembly, and Prime Minister Raffarin has repeatedly
declared that he intends to push the pension bill through.
Nevertheless, the line of the unions is that the opposition
movement is not political and has no desire to bring
down the government. Its aim, according to union officials, is
merely to pressure the government to either drop its pension reform
or amend it.
The political parties of the plural left parliamentary
opposition, led by the Socialist Party and the Communist Party,
have kept their distance from the movement of strikes and protests.
Leading figures in the Socialist Party, including former Prime
Minister Michel Rocard, have openly come out in support of the
government bill.
A key event on Tuesday was a meeting of ministers involved
in education and the education unions, called to preempt any disruption
of the baccalaureate examinations, which secondary students must
pass in order to study in Frances universities. More than
600,000 students were slated to begin the exams on June 12 with
written tests in philosophy. Many striking teachers hoped to disrupt
the exams in order to increase the pressure on the government.
At a June 10 meeting of some 400 education strikers from the
Somme department, which includes Amiens, the main discussion concerned
the most effective means of organising pickets of the baccalaureate
examination centres and preventing the exams from going ahead.
A statement posted on the web site of the main union of teachers
in secondary education, the SNES, which is the largest union in
the FSU, provoked a great deal of anger. The union statement repudiated
an article in Le Monde reporting that the SNES planned
to call a strike on June 12.
The outcome of the June 10 meeting between the education ministers
and unions was a quid pro quo, in which the minister of
the interior, responsible for local government, agreed to let
20,000 school doctors, psychiatrists and social workers remain
in the education service in return for a public statement from
the unions guaranteeing there would be no disruption of the baccalaureate
exams.
The statement declared: Concerned for the interests of
the young people, the trade union organisations reaffirm their
opposition to any form of boycott, obstruction or action of any
kind to disrupt the examinations. For his part, Education
Minister Luc Ferry reaffirmed the governments intention
to shift tens of thousands of education workers out of the national
education service, saying, In no way have any of the reform
plans been withdrawn.
Teams of WSWS supporters at the Paris and Amiens demonstrations
handed out thousands of updated versions of the May 24 World
Socialist Web Site statement, A
political strategy for the defence of workers pensions in
France.
(Editors note: Over the next several days the WSWS
will post interviews with strikers who participated in the Paris
and Amiens demonstrations.)
See Also:
France: Strikes, mass demonstrations
to oppose attacks on pensions
[4 June 2003]
A million workers march against
pension cuts in France
[26 May 2003]
A political strategy to fight
the attack on workers pensions in France
[24 May 2003]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |