Angry French mob boos Macron after signing pensions reform

Asked by a journalist how he felt about the booing, the President replies: 'I have had it worse'

French gendarmes push back demonstrators during a protest against a visit by French President Emmanuel Macron in Muttersholtz. AFP
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Crowds loudly booed French President Emmanuel Macron in eastern France on Wednesday as he embarked on his first trip out of Paris since signing his unpopular pensions reform into law.

Allies encouraged Mr Macron to get out and meet voters after signing the reform following months of protests, with some fearing he was becoming too reclusive inside the presidential palace.

Some locals chanted slogans including “Macron resign” and booed and jeered the 45-year-old, with some personally heckling him when he arrived in Selestat in the Alsace region.

One man accused him of having a “corrupt government on a scale we have never seen before”.

“You will fall soon, you'll see,” he added.

Mr Macron told the man his ideas were “unfair”.

Asked by a journalist how he felt about the booing, the President replied: “I have had it worse.”

It was not all condemnation and some people offered him encouragement, including one retiree who told him: “Keep going.”

Mr Macron commented: “There are people who are not happy. Everyone should be free to express themselves. Afterwards, the country has to go forward.”

He later told reporters that such incidents would not stop him making visits across France and going on walkabouts.

“This anger has to be heard and I am not deaf to it,” he said. “This anger is being expressed, and I didn't expect anything else, but it won't stop me from continuing to make trips.”

On an earlier stage of his trip on Wednesday, police pushed back dozens of protesters banging kitchenware ahead of the President's arrival in the village of Muttersholtz.

Protests in France — in pictures

Pot-bashing, a form of protest with a long history in France, began during Mr Macron's address to the nation on Monday evening after he signed the bill into law at the weekend.

“It's not saucepans that will enable France to move forward,” Mr Macron said as he visited a wood factory in the village.

“The reality across the country is not just those making noise with pans or grumbling.

“You will always see me with people … I have to keep going.”

The President made very few public appearances to speak to voters during the three months leading up to the legislation being signed into law, whose flagship measure is raising the retirement age from 62 to 64.

Political opponents and trade unions have urged protesters to maintain their campaign against the law and called for a new day of mass protest on May 1.

Mr Macron told regional newspapers on Wednesday that he would invite the unions back to the presidential palace in May and said agreements with employers would be “faithfully transcribed” into law.

Police clash with protesters at Paris demonstration over pension bill — video

Police clash with protesters at Paris demonstration over pension bill

A protester throws a tear gas canister during clashes at a rally against the French government's pension reform in Paris, France, 13 April 2023.  The 'sages', members of the Constitutional Council, were due to deliver their verdict on 14 April concerning the examination of the text of the pension reform, almost one month after the country's prime minister announced the use of article 49. 3 of the French Constitution to have the text of the controversial bill to be definitively adopted without a vote.  The reform would raise the retirement age from 62 to 64.   EPA / YOAN VALAT

The images of the heckling come as polls show Mr Macron's popularity ratings close to their lowest ever levels.

The next presidential elections in France are not until 2027 and Mr Macron by law cannot stand a third consecutive time. But analysts have warned the current situation is playing into the hands of far-right leader Marine Le Pen.

The scenes recall Mr Macron's visits around France during the so-called Yellow Vest protests of 2018-19, when the head of state was frequently confronted by angry hecklers and protesters.

On Tuesday evening, a private trip by Mr Macron to Saint-Denis, north-east of Paris, also saw about 300 demonstrators voice their anger at his pension changes.

“People will make themselves heard but that's part of the moment,” an aide to the President told reporters on Wednesday. The aide added that there would be “expressions of anger most probably, support perhaps”.

The head of state was slapped in the face in 2021 by a 28-year-old unemployed medieval history enthusiast during a visit to a small town in south-eastern France.

After Wednesday's visits, Mr Macron is set to go to a school in the southern Herault region on Thursday.

A video surfaced on Tuesday of Mr Macron singing traditional song Le Refuge — about a lodge in the mountains on France's south-western border with Spain — in the street after his televised address on Monday.

He was surrounded by men in their 20s and 30s singing vigorously and the incident might at first have seemed a welcome show of connection with voters for the President.

But the video was first published on the Facebook page of an organisation called “Projet Canto” which, according to left-wing newspaper Liberation, was founded and run by far-right activists.

Jean-Luc Melenchon, a figurehead for the hard left and former presidential candidate, said Mr Macron's power was waning.

“The President's authority is rotting away,” he wrote on his blog.

Updated: April 19, 2023, 9:40 PM