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France: First Job Contract legislation approved
by Constitutional Council
By Rick Kelly and Antoine Lerougetel
31 March 2006
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Frances Constitutional Council yesterday approved the
legality of the Gaullist governments First Job Contract
(CPE) legislation. The CPEwhich allows employers to sack
young workers sacked without cause during their first two years
of employmenthas provoked ongoing strikes and demonstrations
by workers and students.
President Jacques Chirac is widely expected to officially enact
the legislation today, although he still has the option of sending
it back to the National Assembly for fresh debate and possible
revision. He is scheduled to make a televised announcement at
8 p.m. today, French time.
Chirac and Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin have repeatedly
insisted that they will not rescind the CPE, despite the overwhelming
opposition to the law. The government has only offered a dialogue
with trade unions and student organisations over aspects of the
laws implementation, such as the length of the proposed
two-year trial period.
The Socialist Party brought the legislation before the Constitutional
Council, challenging its legality on the grounds that the law
discriminates against people based on their age. The petition
also objected to Villepins suppression of parliamentary
debate when the legislation was rammed through the National Assembly
on March 9. The Council rejected the social-democrats challenge
on the grounds that no law prevents the legislator from
taking measures favouring employment for young people.
This provocative statement makes clear the political nature
of the Councils ruling. There is no question that its adjudication
was preceded by intense behind-the-scenes discussion within the
upper echelons of the political establishment.
The ten members of the Constitutional Council, who are appointed
to serve nine-year terms, are all established party-political
figures. Pierre Mazeaud, chairman of the council, is one of Chiracs
closest associates. The Libération newspaper described
Mazeaud as an ultra-chiracquien.
A number of reports have appeared in the French media confirming
Chiracs determination to back the prime minister in his
assault on young workers conditions. Le Parisien
reported that the president was furious over Interior
Minister Nicolas Sarkozys criticisms of Villepin and the
CPE. Sources close to the president told AFP ahead of the court
ruling that Chirac and Villepin are in complete agreement
not to yield to pressure from the street.
Pierre Giacometti, research director of the polling company
Ipsos, commented: In the past, Mr Chirac has always made
decisions based on his desire to keep power. But now that he is
nearing the end of his term, he may be more determined to stand
firm and provoke a real social clash.
Despite the signs that Chirac and Villepin are preparing for
a confrontation with workers and youth opposed to the CPE, the
trade unions and Socialist and Communist parties have continued
to appeal to the president to show responsibility
and negotiate a compromise. Francois Hollande, leader of the Socialist
Party, asked the president not to promulgate the law, and to send
it back to the parliament for debate.
Now it is for the president to carry out his responsibilities,
François Chérèque of the CFDT union added.
I remind him of the letter which the five trade union confederations
sent to him on Tuesday evening, where we asked him to ask for
a second reading for article 8 which sets up the CPE, so as to
withdraw it and open negotiations.
According to Reuters, 11 left organisations, including
the Socialist Party, Communist Party, and Greens, are holding
a joint press conference today. They will issue a statement on
the situation. Among the delegates participating in the meeting
is Alain Krivine of the Ligue Communiste Révolutionnaire
(LCR). The LCRs participation in the meeting again demonstrates
their role of providing left cover for the Stalinists and social-democrats,
who have made every effort to dissipate the anti-CPE movement
and stabilise the government.
In other developments yesterday, high school and university
students continued their protests against the CPE. Thousands of
youth responded to an appeal to block roads and railway lines
issued earlier this week by the National Students Coordinating
Committee. About 2,000 students erected barricades on train lines
into Pariss Gare de Lyon station. Commuter trains and the
high-speed TGV train were blocked for two hours before the police
cleared the lines. In Marseilles, riot police fired tear gas at
about 400 students who disrupted train and road traffic at another
railway station.
Several highways were blocked throughout France, including
in Nantes, Rennes, Lille, Montpellier, Dunkirk and Aix-en-Provence.
Students in Paris brought traffic to a halt on the citys
major ring road. Reuters estimated that traffic jams across the
country totalled 345 kilometres (215 miles).
Dozens of arrests were reported. One of those detained was
Kark Stoeckel, leader of the main high school students union,
UNL (Union Nationale Lycéenne). They did not
need to arrest uswe were very calm, he declared. By
using the police like this they are legitimising the radicalisation
of the movement.
There was only one reported incident involving police attempting
to break up students high school blockades, despite an edict
from education minister Gilles de Robien to principals to reopen
all the schools, using the police if necessary. According to high
school student unions, about one out of every four schools has
been blockaded by striking students.
Many principals resisted the governments order to send
in the police. [De Robien] is pouring oil on the fire,
Philippe Tournier, the principal of one high school blockaded
since March 10, told the International Herald Tribune.
If you threaten students with the police they will become
more determined.
See Also:
France: Unions appeal to President Chirac
to resolve First Job Contract crisis
[30 March 2006]
France: Millions of workers and students
strike against Gaullist government
[29 March 2006]
France: Fight vs. First Job Contract
raises need for new working class leadership
[28 March 2006]
France: Mass movement against First
Job Contract in danger
Trade unions meet with prime minister
[25 March 2006]
France: May-June 1968 and today
[25 March 2006]
The French Popular Front of 1936: Historical
lessons in the First Job Contract struggle
[24 March 2006]
France: Political issues in the fight
against the governments First Job Contract
[18 March 2006]
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