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Old 04-02-2023, 10:47 PM   #1
The_Waco_Kid
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Default Macron's popularity is in free fall after raising France's retirement age, analysts say

yet another progressive euro leader seems suddenly quite unpopular. maybe he and Trudeau can compare notes and see who can be the biggest unpopular dickhead?


this is what France gets for its socialist ways and providing lazy Frenchy's a government pension.

Macron's popularity is in free fall after raising France's retirement age, analysts say

https://www.yahoo.com/news/macrons-p...rc=fp_deeplink


Melissa Rossi·Contributor

Sat, April 1, 2023 at 4:00 AM CDT·


Parisians demonstrate on Thursday after the French government pushed pension reform through Parliament without a vote. (Thomas Samson/AFP via Getty Images)


Growing frustration over French President Emmanuel Macron’s newly passed pension reform law, which has sparked two weeks of angry protests, have benefitted his political opponents and called into question whether he can remain in power, analysts say.


“There’s something different about these protests,” Joseph de Weck, a fellow in the European Security Initiative at the Foreign Policy Research Institute, told Yahoo News. “A trust in the president has been broken and there’s a feeling that the government does whatever it wants, disregarding completely the will of the majority of the French, 70% of whom don’t want this reform. So Macron doesn’t have a democratic mandate for doing what he’s doing.”



A rally against pension reform in Paris. (Telmo Pinto/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)


The new legislation, which Macron rammed through the National Assembly earlier this month without a full vote of its members, raised the retirement age from 62 to 64. While Macron insisted that the change was fiscally necessary in order for France to provide services to its aging population, it has resulted in a fiery public outcry.


“Sentiments are moving from discontent to anger,” political analyst Jean-Christophe Gallien, a columnist for France TV, told Yahoo News. “The country is not only opposing pension reform, it’s opposing Macron’s way of governing.”


Even unions that had previously allied with Macron, have aligned with each other in calling strikes to protest the reforms, and increasingly, Macron himself.



French President Emmanuel Macron, center, speaks to journalists upon his arrival in Savines-Le-Lac, southeastern France, on March 30. (Sebastien Nogier/AFP via Getty Images)


Political communications expert Philippe Moreau Chevrolet told Yahoo News that “the problem now is not about reforms or the economy. It’s about democracy.” The majority of the French, he said, “feel that Macron went too far and abused his power.” He likened the French presidency to a “political monster,” saying that the executive seat “has gained so much power over the years, while the Parliament is weak, that we don't have any checks and balances anymore.”


Weekly demonstrations against boosting the retirement age started in January, but last week, when Macron’s Prime Minister Élisabeth Borne used Article 49.3 to push through the pension law without requiring the lower house of Parliament to vote or debate it, fury erupted.


“Immediately in the streets of Paris, and across France, young people came out to say they were not OK with that,” Gallien said.


The invocation of Article 49.3 also triggered two no-confidence votes in the lower house of Parliament on March 20, with Macron’s government surviving by a mere nine votes.


With placards referring to “King Macron,” showing the president styled as Louis XVI, along with graffiti calling for his decapitation in Place de la Concorde, where Louis met the guillotine in 1793, the belief that Macron is acting like an autocrat is hitting new highs, said British-born French historian Andrew Hussey. “Some are even starting to use the ‘R-word’ — revolution,” Hussey told Yahoo News.



Throngs of protesters on the ninth day of nationwide strikes against French government's pension reform, in Nantes, France, March 23. (Stephane Mahe/Reuters)


“Macron’s popularity is in free fall, it’s downward-spiraling,” Moreau Chevrolet said, noting the president’s approval rating dropped from 42% a year ago to 28% recorded earlier this month. “Even his supporters are turning against him.” While Macron regained confidence during his first term, when the Yellow Jacket protests forced him to drop a planned fuel tax, Moreau Chevrolet doesn’t see any easy way out this time, describing the current upheaval as a “historical political crisis that was provoked by the president unnecessarily.”


Moreau Chevrolet noted that Macron’s advisers cautioned against taking on pension reform during a period of inflation and increased costs of living, when the economy is just coming back from COVID. “His own experts said this reform was untimely, that it was not necessary right now, it’s not the right plan and not the right time,” he said.


Opponents of the pension reform law are now hoping the Constitutional Court, which is required to give final approval on legislation, will either dismiss or weaken it. “If the Constitutional Court cancels this law, the resolution to the crisis will come from the democratic system itself,” Moreau Chevrolet said.



A protester wearing a mask with President Macron's face holds a placard that reads "Come get me" during a demonstration against pension reform in Paris. (Lucy North/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)


“Some aspects of the law may be struck down by the Constitutional Council,” Paul Smith, a professor of French politics at the University of Nottingham, told Yahoo News, pointing to the possibility, for instance, of not raising retirement ages for those working in physically demanding jobs. “But that could be a six-week process,” he added.


While most of Europe has already begun gradually raising their retirement age, the French have proven particularly resistant to any more changes.


“In the 1980s, President Mitterand told the French they could retire at 60, but that’s been nibbled away at,” Smith said. In 2010, it was boosted to 62. “Then Macron comes into government and says there’s a big gap in funding for the pension scheme. But he’s gone about it in a ham-fisted way,” he said, adding that young people are particularly motivated to join the mass protests. “They’re thinking, ‘You’re moving the goalposts for my parents. Where will the goalposts be when I retire?’”


In recent days, the ireat Macron has turned increasingly violent. Garbage blazes at protests are now common, and demonstrators have shut down access to the Louvre, the Eiffel Tower and Charles de Gaulle Airport. Last week, they set fire to Bordeaux City Hall.



A protester throws tires onto a bonfire in Brest, western France, March 30. (Fred Tanneau/AFP via Getty Images)


“There’s got to be a tipping point where Macron resigns — when he looks at this country falling apart and the anger drives him out,” Hussey said.


Others, however, believe that Macron will remain in power, but as a lame duck whose political capital is spent. “Politically, I think his mandate is over,” said Moreau Chevrolet.


A prevalent fear among analysts, however, is how this ordeal is empowering extremist political parties in the country. Far-left politician Jean-Luc Mélenchon of France Unbowed, who came in third in the first round of presidential elections last year, has been partaking in demonstrations, calling for “a battle” to stop the pension law. Far-right politician Marine Le Pen, who lost the presidency to Macron last April, has so far stayed largely on the sidelines while expressing her disdain for both the pension reform and at Macron’s role in causing the mayhem.


“Consciously, the government is creating all the conditions for a social explosion, and it was foreseeable for months, as if they were looking for that,” she told AFP earlier this month.



Marine Le Pen, president of the French far-right National Rally party, speaking at a press conference in Paris on March 22. (Bertrand Guay/AFP via Getty Images)


Analysts worry that Macron’s pension maneuvering is driving voters straight into the arms of Le Pen and Mélenchon. “The only ones who can win from this are the far-right and the far-left,” said de Werk. “They’re the ones who are saying France is run by a political elite that is anti-democratic and has its own interests.”


According to an Ifop Group survey released last week, if parliamentary elections were held today, Le Pen’s party would win 26%, Mélenchon would take 26% and Macron would come in third at 22%.


Even though the next presidential election not scheduled until 2027, de Werk is certain that “the French will remember” the pension battle.


In the shorter term, the real damage to France, which will host next year’s Olympic Games, may be in terms of its international image. Gallien was taken aback when the “government of Iran told Mr. Macron to respect the rights of people in the street,” — a reprimand that rang hypocritical to many, given Iran’s brutal repression of protesters.


“And what’s going to happen during the Olympics?” asked Smith. “If Macron can’t control the protesters enough for King Charles to come,” he noted, referring to a scheduled visit by the English king that Macron canceled last week, “what’s he going to do when it’s really in the international spotlight?”


For now, Macron is hoping that the anger over raising the retirement age will fade. On Thursday, he made an appearance in the French Alps to announce a new water conservation plan. But even there, he couldn’t escape the controversy that follows him wherever he goes.


“There is a social movement against a reform,” he told reporters. “But that doesn’t mean that everything else has to stop.”
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Old 04-02-2023, 11:30 PM   #2
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Now you want us to bail out France while you give trump all your money. Er, that you don't give to salty, anyway.
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Old 04-02-2023, 11:38 PM   #3
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Now you want us to bail out France while you give trump all your money. Er, that you don't give to salty, anyway.

if you say so
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Old 04-15-2023, 08:35 PM   #4
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macron was never popular to begin with
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Old 04-15-2023, 09:51 PM   #5
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Guess that is why unpopular peoples items get voted in.
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Old 04-15-2023, 10:20 PM   #6
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looks like Macron's pulled a frenchy and kicked his own ass .. again. brilliant!


Analysis: ‘Tone deaf’ Macron faces backlash over Taiwan comments

https://www.cnn.com/2023/04/13/europ...cmd/index.html




CNN - French President Emmanuel Macron might have hoped to focus this week on what may prove the biggest domestic test of his leadership, as France’s Constitutional Council prepares to rule Friday on whether or not he can push ahead with controversial pension reforms.



Instead, he finds himself grappling with international blowback from last week’s friendly visit to China – and in particular from comments that have made him rather unpopular both in Washington DC and with some of his allies in Europe.



On his flight home from Beijing, Macron gave an interview to POLITICO Europe. In it, he said that Europe must not become “just America’s followers” when asked about the prospect of China invading Taiwan.


“The question Europeans need to answer … is it in our interest to accelerate [a crisis] on Taiwan? No. The worse thing would be to think that we Europeans must become followers on this topic and take our cue from the US agenda and a Chinese overreaction,” Macron said, adding that Europe must not get “caught up in crises that are not ours, which prevents it from building its strategic autonomy.”



Strategic autonomy is a Brussels term that refers to the EU having an independent geopolitical policy, which relies in part on the bloc being able to become a third power and not get squashed between the US and China. However, the China hawks, typically in Eastern Europe, have always been skeptical of anything that puts clear water between Europe and the US, who they see as the ultimate protectors of European territory through NATO.



Macron has since attempted to downplay his comments, saying on Wednesday that France was “for the status quo in Taiwan” and that position “has not changed.” But the hawks have already hit back.



Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki said: “Instead of building strategic autonomy from the United States, I propose a strategic partnership with the United States.” Lithuania’s foreign minister tweeted “We are capable of defending Europe without Chinese help. Instead of requesting assistance we should be projecting our strengths.”



Eastern European diplomats have been less subtle. One said that Macron is “simply tone deaf to everything happening in the world. No wonder Macroning has become a synonym of bullshitting without any result.” Another said they “cannot understand” Macron, that his visit to Beijing and remarks on Taiwan were “not helpful” and that Europe should engage with countries that “value democracy and the rule of law” over China.



Macron’s trip was further undermined when Beijing performed military rehearses encircling Taiwan the day after he left China.
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Old 04-15-2023, 11:08 PM   #7
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What does this have to do with those raising hell about pensions in France?

The frogs have always wanted to be a leader of stuff involving them. Always fall short of it too.

As far as I know, they had no roots in China. Indochina maybe. Vietnam definitely.
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