Egypt Today
French government and labour unions met on Wednesday over a pensions overhaul, 14 days into a crippling transport strike that is hurting businesses, wearing out commuters and casting a shadow over holiday plans.
After hundreds of thousands took to the streets on Tuesday, both sides stood firm ahead of series of meetings; with government officials having said they are ready to negotiate.
Union leaders have vowed to continue their action into the new year as the government defended its plan to forge the country’s 42 pension schemes into a single, points-based system.
With attitudes appearing to be hardening, the militant CGT union claimed it had cut electricity to tens of thousands of homes in the Gironde district, Southwest and the cities of Lyon, Nantes and Orleans on Tuesday, and about 2,000 households in Paris.
At a meeting late Tuesday, four unions including the CGT vowed to continue their action; which has wreaked havoc on public transport in Paris and other cities, hobbled regional and international trains, and grounded planes on some strike days.
The unions urged their members to take “local actions” throughout the Christmas holidays, and vowed there would be no letup unless the reform plan is withdrawn.
Critics say the overhaul could force millions of people to work beyond the official retirement age of 62 — one of the lowest in Europe — by setting a “pivot age” of 64 for a full pension.
The government insists the new system will be fairer and more transparent, improve pensions for women and low earners in particular.
“My determination, and that of the government and the majority, is total,” Prime Minister Edouard Philippe told parliament on the eve of Wednesday’s talks.