
French President Francois Hollande stays defiant in the face of nationwide anti-reform protest rallies, pledging to go ahead with the controversial plans despite the opposition pressure on his administration.
Speaking in a radio interview yesterday, Hollande vowed to stick with his controversial attempts to reform the labour market.
The president, who is weighing a possible bid for re-election in May 2017, noted that he placed the need to reform over his personal fame. Hollande has some of the lowest poll ratings of any post-war French president.
“I’ll not give way because too many (previous) governments have backed down,” said Hollande, adding, “I prefer that people have an image of a president who made reforms rather than a president who did nothing.”
The president warned demonstrators against resorting to violence and said, “Demonstrating is a right, but smashing things up is a crime.”
Hollande also pointed out that 350 police officers had been injured and more than 1,000 people had already been arrested at the ongoing nationwide demonstrations.
He also emphasised that the reforms were necessary and measures will take time to show results.
“It takes time for those reforms to take effect,” said Hollande, adding, “The battle isn’t won. It’ll only be won when we’ve, over several months, a sustained fall in unemployment,” he said. “I’m fighting the battle every day.”
Elsewhere in his remarks, the president defended his assertion a month ago that France was “doing better.”
“When I came up with this turn of phrase, I didn’t mean that everything is getting better,” the president stressed, adding “But things are effectively getting better for France. It’s not a campaign slogan, it’s the reality.”
The government has promised to make the reforms more flexible. The French government says the proposed labour reforms are aimed at curbing the country’s unemployment rate, which Hollande is trying to lower to below 10 percent.
Opponents argue that the proposed reforms will worsen working conditions and increase the unemployment rate.
The comments come as France is bracing for a week of strikes in protest at the reforms. Protests are also scheduled in several cities across the country.
Rail workers were also due to start strikes yesterday evening, in a walkout that could disrupt transport through until Friday.
The developments come after France’s embattled Socialist government made use of the constitution’s Article 49-3, allowing them to bypass parliament and force through a controversial labour reform bill.
The government of Premier Valls has recently survived a no-confidence vote over the bill that has drawn hundreds of thousands onto the streets over the past months.
The government survived the confidence vote since it was called by opposition parties that do not have enough votes to get it through.
Protesters and workers’ unions, however, say the government wants to make it easier and less costly for employers to lay off workers. — PressTV.



