Thursday, March 9, 2023

French Pension Strikes To Continue Thursday. Fuel Supply And Air Travel Are Disrupted

 

Reuters: French pension strikes to continue Thursday, disrupting fuel supply and air travel 

PARIS (Reuters) -Train and air traffic will again be disrupted in France on Thursday and garbage collection in cities including Paris will be patchy as strikes against a planned pension reform are set to enter a third consecutive day. 

Opinion polls show a majority of voters oppose President Emmanuel Macron's plan to delay the retirement age by two years to 64, but the government says the policy change is essential to ensure the system does not go bust. 

Workers in several sectors including oil refineries and railways continued to strike on Wednesday and plan to carry on for the rest of the week after record numbers of people took to the streets on Tuesday as part of a nationwide day of industrial action.  

Read more ....  

WNU Editor: This is how you cripple a country .... No deliveries from TotalEnergies' French refineries due to strike (Reuters).  

Update: The government is doubling down .... French Senate votes to increase retirement age to 64 (DW). More here .... French Senate votes to raise retirement age from 62 to 64 amid nationwide strikes (France 24). 

French Pension Strikes To Continue Thursday

French pension reform strikes continue to disrupt fuel supplies, power output -- France24  

French pension strikes continue to disrupt power output, fuel supplies -- DNYUZ/Reuters  

French protesters keep up fight against pension plan in new day of strikes -- France 24  

Strike Cuts Power to Olympic Village, Stade De France -- Reuters

France’s young people stand up against higher retirement age -- AP

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Macron can make this his hill to die on, then subsequently lose the next election to MLP, who will inherit a France (and Western Europe at large) in economic and social freefall. Just like with Trump, history will be reset to begin on day 1 of her presidency and all the consequences of the last 40 years will be blamed on the newly crowned French “far right”.

Fast forward to the next election, and there stands Macron next to the smouldering pile of ashes with his relatively unstained shoes ready to make everything better again.