France faced another day of protests Sunday, March 18, against a bitterly contested pension reform rammed through by President Emmanuel Macron’s government, a day before crucial no-confidence votes in the National Assembly.
After weeks of peaceful strikes and marches against raising the official retirement age from 62 to 64, police on Saturday closed the Place de la Concorde opposite the Assembly for demonstrations following two successive nights of clashes.
Some individual lawmakers were targeted, with Eric Ciotti – chief of the conservative Les Républicains party expected not to back the no-confidence motions – finding early Sunday that his constituency office had been pelted with rocks overnight. “The killers who did this want to put pressure on my vote on Monday,” Ciotti wrote on Twitter, posting pictures showing smashed windows and threatening graffiti.

More than 120 people were arrested at a 4,000-strong Paris demonstration Saturday where some set rubbish bins on fire, destroyed bus stops and erected improvised barricades. And 15 more were held in Lyon after police said “groups of violent individuals” triggered clashes. Other demonstrations in cities around France passed off peacefully, with hundreds turning out in the Mediterranean port city Marseille.
Away from the streets of major cities, the hard-left CGT union said Saturday that workers would shut down France’s largest oil refinery in Normandy, warning that two more could follow on Monday. So far, strikers had only prevented fuel deliveries from leaving refineries but not completely halted operations.
Industrial action has also halted rubbish collection in much of Paris, with around 10,000 tons of waste now on the streets as the government forces some binmen back to work. A ninth day of wider strikes and protests is planned for Thursday.
‘Adding chaos to chaos’
Alongside raising the headline retirement age, Macron’s reform also increases the number of years people must pay into the system to receive a full pension. The government says its changes are needed to avoid crippling deficits in the coming decades linked to France’s aging population.
But opponents say the law places an unfair burden on low earners, women and people doing physically wearing jobs, and polls have consistently shown majorities opposed to the changes.
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After Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne used Article 49.3 of the Constitution to pass the law without a vote in the National Assembly, opponents’ last hope to block the reform is to topple the government in one of Monday’s no-confidence votes.
Labor Minister Olivier Dussopt told The Sunday Journal that “it’s not an admission of failure, but it’s heart-breaking” to have used the nuclear option to pass the reform.
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The pensions changes were “too important to take the risk of playing Russian roulette,” he added, after weeks of concessions to Les Républicains – long in favor of raising the retirement age – failed to bring enough conservative MPs on board to secure a majority.
Few lawmakers in the fractious Républicains group are expected to vote against the government in Monday’s no-confidence motions, brought by a small group of centrist MPs and the far-right Rassemblement National. Ciotti said he didn’t want to “add chaos to chaos”