Springtime in France Begins With a Broad Street Mobilization for Employment, Retirement, and Other Social Rights
Friday 26 March 2010
by: Jim Cohen, t r u t h o u t | Photo Essay

French high school students protesting on March 23. (Photos: Jim Cohen)
Paris - Only two days after the end of French regional elections, in which candidates associated with conservative President Nicolas Sarkozy took a drubbing, civil servants and other workers took to the streets to protest a broad range of neoliberal reforms that are contributing to growing social and economic insecurity. On Tuesday, March 23, an "inter-professional day of action," called for by all major trade unions, mobilized over half a million in the streets of French cities, including about 60,000 in Paris. Public elementary and secondary schoolteachers, who are fighting not just cutbacks, but an authoritarian reorganization of the whole teacher education program, were among the most mobilized in the one-day event.
But as these photos show, several other categories of working adults and school-age youth were also on hand: high school students worried about growing class size and the suppression of economics and social studies in certain academic sections; professors who are being forced into a regime of unequal competition among public universities; undocumented workers from the African country of Mali, calling for legalization and decent wages; public transport workers and other civil servants who are resisting governmental measures to push back the retirement age from 60 to 65. The mood in Tuesday's marches was one of broad solidarity and modest confidence, reflecting not just improving spring weather, but also the feeling that the left, in spite of its serious divisions and lack of a common project, might yet find a way of uniting to change the direction of French politics.

French high school students.

French university professors under the banner of Sauvons l'université (let's save the university).

Student teachers. The banner says, "To attack our profession means schools are in danger."

A delegation of teachers from the department of Seine-et-Marne (77) and belonging to the union known as FSU (Fédération syndicale unitaire).

High school youths belonging to the Communist Party youth. (Sure look oppressed, don't they?)

Members of a national union of high school students. One sign reads : "Repressive state, depressive people"; a girl's sweatshirt has the logo "Rêve générale," which is a rhyme and a play on the words "grève générale," or general strike, that means "general dream."

Workers from the "Teleperformance" company protesting layoffs.

Day care workers protesting layoffs. Their sign could be translated as "Don't put babies in storage lockers."

The banner of "Solidaires," a grouping of several labor unions, reads: "To defend our retirement plans is to share the wealth by taxing profits," and, on the left side, "To share the wealth is to raise wages and the minimum wage."

Young man displaying flags of the union "Sud," one of the most left-leaning confederations.

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Comments
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Guess they don't want to
Fri, 03/26/2010 - 17:34 — Anonymous (not verified)Guess they don't want to live in the US, where only corporations are deemed sufficiently important to get welfare no matter how stupidly & greedily they behave--yet are never perceived as "welfare queens".
Well, French people in
Sat, 03/27/2010 - 06:22 — Jim (not verified)Well, French people in general are remarkably "pro-American" when it comes to culture (the good stuff, movies, lit, music) but as for the politics and economics, the attitude is definitely "no thanks" and "good luck improving your model with some health care for once, hope you get there..."...
France retains the best
Sat, 03/27/2010 - 22:13 — Liced-Christ (not verified)France retains the best health care system in the world --- an 80/20 percent government /privatized system that includes full coverage for things like acupuncture, maternity leave wages, homeopathic medicine, herbal cures, allopathic care, surgery, etc. Their system costs less per capita that that of the USA while every single citizen, without exception, enjoys full health benefits. That's what you call a civilized society. Here, in this schizoid country of scavenger capitalism, you have the neoliberal agenda of succeed or suffer at your own cost and blame: Darwinian/Reaganite economics preying off the lower and middle classes. This is what these people are protesting: neoliberal economics and the kind of immoral, hateful society it spawns. How intelligent are the French compared to the sleep walking automatons in this country!
I can only agree with
Mon, 03/29/2010 - 08:01 — Jim (not verified)I can only agree with Liced-C. The French health care system is still excellent but the public hospital system is in danger of being submitted to market logic each day a little more. That's one reason why people have gone to the streets.
If we could do a scientific experiment and transpose 100 tea-partiers into French society for five years, what would they think at the end of that period of "socialized medicine"? I bet they'd love it.
So, how long before Sarkozy
Tue, 03/30/2010 - 13:57 — Francoise in California (not verified)So, how long before Sarkozy goes the way of W Bush? That would somewhat ameliorate the privatization-of-hospitals situation.