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Opinion

France under fire: What’s really going on?

There is political unrest in France and, as our blogger - a Jew - notes, political instability is unsettling for any minority

October 6, 2019 14:22
Lighting up the Paris skyline. (Photo: Chabad.org/Thierry Guez)
2 min read

France is going through its biggest upheaval since the riots of May 1968.  Today’s “gilets jaunes” (yellow vests) are not the students of yesteryear, but the challenge to government may be even greater as public support still runs high and weekly protests continue despite the winter cold.

The main target is the President – “Macron resign” they cry -- but they also reject parliament and political parties, unions, media and NGOs.  Their potential spokespersons are physically threatened.

The source of this modern fury has come not from the ethnic suburbs or the unemployed.  It’s rather the working poor and retirees outside the main urban centres who feel denigrated by the Paris elite and disadvantaged by technological revolution and globalisation. Social media has promoted an “us and them“ standoff and facilitated ever-shifting country-wide demonstrations.

The government has made significant gestures to improve the protestors’ financial situation, but their complaints are sweeping and often contradictory.  They want more public services – schools, rail links and hospitals – but also lower taxes.  They demand decisive action from a president they want to depose in favour of Swiss-style referenda. Their catch-cry for “fiscal fairness” means higher taxes on the rich and multinational companies.