Emmanuel Macron French MPs adopt President's signature rail reform
French lawmakers on Wednesday overwhelmingly backed a controversial
reform of indebted state rail operator SNCF, handing President Emmanuel
Macron a key victory in his battle with trade unions.
French lawmakers on Wednesday overwhelmingly backed a controversial reform of indebted state rail operator SNCF, handing President Emmanuel Macron a key victory in his battle with trade unions.
The vote in the National Assembly is a blow to the labour movement, which called three months of rolling strikes over the bill, the longest industrial action in over 30 years on French railways.
Members of the lower house of parliament, where the ruling party has a large majority, adopted the bill by 452 votes for to 80 against and 27 abstentions.
The bill now goes to the Senate for a final vote on Thursday.
Analysts have compared the standoff between the centrist Macron and French railworkers with Margaret Thatcher's showdown with British miners in the 1980s.
It is being closely
watched as a sign of Macron's ability to face down France's unions,
which have had success in pressuring previous governments to withdraw,
or significantly water down, unpopular reforms.
Train
drivers particularly had resisted plans to deny job and pension
guarantees to new rail recruits, as well as plans to turn the SNCF into a
joint-stock company, which they see as a first step toward
privatisation.
The government argues the
loss-making SNCF -- a bastion of the union movement -- needs to cut
costs and improve flexibility before the EU passenger rail market opens
up to competition.
A poll showed voters largely on
board with the changes, unswayed by 30 days of strikes since early
April that have caused headaches for millions of travellers on two days
out of every five.
The SNCF has estimated the cost of the walkouts at 400 million euros ($470 million).
Labour leaders refused to concede victory on Wednesday, announcing that the strikes would continue as planned until June 28.
"This strike is far from over," Philippe Martinez of the hardline CGT, France's biggest public sector union, said.
French 'stagnation' over?
But the movement has been showing signs of fatigue, with the number of strikers steadily tapered off in recent weeks.
An estimated 12.78 percent of workers walked off the job on Wednesday, down from around 34 percent in April.
Union
leaders can claim to have won several concessions, including job
guarantees for existing staff if they take a position with a new
operator arriving in France.
The government has also pledged take on 35 billion euros of SNCF debt and to not sell off the newly created SNCF shares.
In return, the unions have agreed to begin talks on a new collective labour agreement.
Having
refused to back down on the key elements of his plan, Macron may have
cleared his path for equally tricky reforms to France's strained pension
system and vast public sector.
"For Emmanuel
Macron and (Prime Minister) Edouard Philippe, this political victory
against a fortress long deemed unassailable (the SNCF) changes
everything," the rightwing Figaro newspaper wrote in an editorial Monday.
"Along with the reform of the labour code, the SNCF reform shows that France is not hopelessly condemned to stagnation," it added.
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