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French Diplomacy Undercuts U.S. Efforts to Rein China In
  + stars: | 2023-04-08 | by ( Roger Cohen | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
President Emmanuel Macron of France complimented China’s top leader on the “very fragrant tea.” President Xi Jinping recalled “taking notes in order to understand” when he visited his father, then governor of the southeastern Guangdong province, in 1978. He also observed, extolling Chinese economic development, that the province now has “four cities with more than 10 million people.”It was an exchange of remarkable intimacy, the two leaders, tieless, sharing pleasantries in what was once the official residence of Mr. Xi’s father. The conversation came at the end of a three-day visit by Mr. Macron that was notable for the exceptional attention showered on him, and for the commitment in a concluding joint statement to a “global strategic partnership.”What exactly that will mean — beyond the commitments to the development of civilian nuclear power stations, the transition to carbon-neutral economies, sales of Europe’s Airbus aircraft and the promotion of pork exports — is not altogether clear. But at a time when Sino-American relations are in a deep freeze, Mr. Macron staked out an independent European position, and both leaders repeatedly lauded a “multipolar world,” thinly disguised code for one that is not American dominated.
SummarySummary Companies China starts three days of drills around TaiwanTaiwan says 71 Chinese planes crossed Taiwan Strait median lineTaiwan says it will respond calmlyChina angered by Taiwan president meeting U.S. House SpeakerAnnouncement comes shortly after French president left ChinaFUZHOU, China/TAIPEI, April 8 (Reuters) - Seventy-one Chinese military aircraft crossed the sensitive median line of the Taiwan Strait on Saturday as China began drills around Taiwan in anger at President Tsai Ing-wen's meeting with the speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives. The People's Liberation Army said it had started the combat readiness patrols and "Joint Sword" exercises around Taiwan, having said earlier it would be holding them in the Taiwan Strait and to the north, south and east of Taiwan "as planned". SITUATION 'AS EXPECTED'There was no broader sense of alarm in Taiwan about the drills, where people are long accustomed to Chinese threats. European Union chief Ursula von der Leyen, also in China this week to meet Xi, said stability in the Taiwan Strait was of paramount importance. The Taiwan security source said China's recent efforts to charm foreign leaders proved in vain after the announcement of the drills.
Noah Barkin, an analyst with the Rhodium Group, said China's chief objective was to prevent Europe from aligning more closely with the United States. Macron travelled to China with European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen, both pressuring China on Ukraine, but failing to wrest any public shifts in position from Xi. Xi did not mention a possible conversation with Zelenskiy in China's official reports of his comments after the meetings. "Macron seemed to believe he could charm Xi into shifting his approach on the war," he said. "China and Europe can still be partners," said Wang Yiwei, director of Center for European Studies at Renmin University in Beijing.
French President Emmanuel Macron sought to enlist Chinese leader Xi Jinping in efforts to persuade Russia to stop its war in Ukraine, inviting a U.S. rival that sees itself as an increasingly vital part of global diplomacy to play a more prominent role in ending the conflict. Mr. Macron made the appeal during a meeting with Mr. Xi on Thursday, part of a three-day trip that French officials say is designed to limit Chinese support for Russia.
PARIS—French President Emmanuel Macron is expected to press Chinese leader Xi Jinping during a trip to China this week to limit support for Russia in its war against Ukraine, according to French officials, amid growing Western concerns over Beijing’s deepening economic and political ties with Moscow. Mr. Macron is scheduled to arrive in China on Wednesday, a day before his meeting with Mr. Xi in a bid to dissuade him from throwing his full weight behind Russia’s war campaign, French officials said. China is Russia’s most significant partner and an increasingly important economic lifeline as it faces Western sanctions.
PARIS—The protest movement against President Emmanuel Macron ’s bill to raise France’s retirement age is drawing support from a new cohort: the young. French people in their late teens and early 20s are flocking to protests even though Mr. Macron says his overhaul is designed to preserve France’s financially challenged pension system for younger generations.
[1/6] French President Emmanuel Macron speaks to members of the media as he visits Savines-Le-Lac, South Eastern France, March 30, 2023. With the water plan, Macron and his government are looking to move to other topics. "There are protests, but it does not mean everything must stop," Macron said. Before his speech, Macron told reporters that protests would not stop him from adopting new policies. In some towns, half the water is lost to water leaks, with a nationwide average of 20%.
French Protests Grow Volatile in Test for Macron
  + stars: | 2023-03-28 | by ( Noemie Bisserbe | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
PARIS—French President Emmanuel Macron faced a nationwide demonstration Tuesday as the protest movement against his pension overhaul has begun to morph into a violent rebuke of presidential power. More than 13,000 police officers were deployed across the country, including 5,500 in Paris, for protests that were expected to draw more young people. Many say they have been spurred by Mr. Macron’s decision to invoke a special provision of the French constitution to raise the retirement age without a vote in the National Assembly, France’s lower house of parliament.
PARIS—More than a million protesters took to the streets across France on Thursday in a full-throated rebuke of President Emmanuel Macron ’s decision to push his pension overhaul through Parliament. The turnout, which produced a river of humanity that snaked through the boulevards of Paris, was a sign that public resistance to Mr. Macron’s overhaul isn’t letting up even as the measures are set to become law.
PARIS—Workers across France walked off the job and took to the streets in the first organized nationwide demonstration since President Emmanuel Macron pushed his pension overhaul through Parliament. Turnout at the protests on Thursday will provide an indication of how much momentum protesters still have to continue demonstrations now that the bill is set to become law. Spontaneous protests, some of them violent, have erupted around the country since Mr. Macron decided a week ago to invoke a special provision of the French Constitution to bypass Parliament and raise the retirement age from 62 to 64 by 2030.
A man in Lille, northern France, stands next to a placard reading "No!" Strikes and protests around France on Thursday disrupted travel and filled the streets as citizens demonstrated against changes to the pension system. His bill will see the retirement age for most workers rise from 62 to 64 and the number of years a worker must pay into the system to receive a full pension rise from 42 to 43 in 2027. On Thursday, unions accused Macron of making "provocative" comments after he said they had failed to engage in negotiations over changes to the pension system and compared the protests to the raiding of the U.S. Capitol in 2021. Meanwhile, electricity output was cut, refinery blockages continued and the civil aviation authority said flight services would be reduced into the weekend.
PARIS—President Emmanuel Macron stood by his overhaul of France’s pension system on Wednesday but proposed several measures for workers—including bonus payments for employees of companies that buy back shares—in a bid to calm an escalating protest movement against his government. In his first public remarks since pushing through the overhaul last week without a vote in Parliament, Mr. Macron said the law and its centerpiece, raising the retirement age from 62 to 64 by 2030, were needed to fix a pension system that would become unaffordable in a matter of years. He said he wanted the law’s provisions to enter into force by the end of this year, defying polls that show the public is largely opposed to the overhaul.
Here is why:WHAT CHANGES TO THE PENSION SYSTEM DOES MACRON WANT TO MAKE? Failure to act would see the pension system record an annual deficit of 13.5 billion euros by 2030, the government forecasts. The government calculated that "accompanying measures" to smooth the way would cost 4.8 billion euros, creating a 0.3 billion euros surplus in 2030. France's pension system costs nearly 14% of GDP, the third highest within the OECD behind Italy and Greece. He could call a referendum on the pension reform and risk it becoming a plebiscite on his presidency.
French President Emmanuel Macron arrives to attend the National Roundtable on Diplomacy at the Foreign Ministry in Paris on March 16, 2023. The government of French President Emmanuel Macron faces a no-confidence vote Monday afternoon, as furious opposition lawmakers contest his decision to force changes to the pension system through parliament without a poll. If the no-confidence vote fails, the bill will go through and lift the retirement age of most workers from 62 to 64 by 2030. Much will hinge on how many members of the center-right Les Republicains party break ranks and vote against the government. Macron calculated he did not have the votes to see the legislation through the lower house of the National Assembly.
Protesters set garbage on fire in Paris, prompting police to use tear gas and water cannons to disperse the groups . President Emmanuel Macron of France might have circumvented Parliament in passing his contentious pension overhaul, but there remains a large constituency—millions of street protesters—who contend they have final say in the matter. Protest movements have long been the final arbiter, albeit an unofficial one, of France’s political system, bringing successive governments to their knees and forcing previous presidents to abandon or even rescind legislation protesters oppose. That is why thousands of protesters have streamed into public squares across France since Mr. Macron exercised Article 49 of the constitution to raise France’s retirement age to 64 from 62 by 2030 without the consent of Parliament.
PARIS—When France’s President Emmanuel Macron was re-elected last year he vowed to turn the page on his tendency to exercise power in a style he once described as “Jupiterian,” a reference to the king of the gods in ancient Roman mythology. Mr. Macron said he would govern as a consensus builder in his second term, piecing together majority votes in a highly polarized Parliament.
PARIS—French President Emmanuel Macron is expected to face no-confidence votes early next week aimed at bringing down his government and killing his overhaul of France’s pension system. A group of centrist lawmakers opposed to Mr. Macron filed a no-confidence motion on Friday with the backing of at least 58 members of the National Assembly, the lower house of parliament. Far-right National Rally also put forward its own no-confidence motion against the government on Friday.
PARIS—French President Emmanuel Macron is expected to face a vote of no confidence early next week aimed at bringing down his government and killing his overhaul of France’s pension system. A group of centrist lawmakers opposed to Mr. Macron filed a no-confidence motion on Friday with the backing of at least 58 members of the National Assembly, the lower house of parliament.
PARIS—When French President Emmanuel Macron was re-elected last year he vowed to turn the page on his tendency to exercise power in a style he once described as “Jupiterian,” a reference to the king of the gods in ancient Roman mythology. Mr. Macron said he would govern as a consensus builder in his second term, piecing together majority votes in a highly polarized Parliament.
PARIS—The government of French President Emmanuel Macron invoked a special provision of France’s constitution Thursday to bypass parliament and increase the country’s retirement age, an act of defiance that escalates the leader’s standoff with street protesters and opposition lawmakers. The use of Article 49 of the French constitution allows the Macron government to enact a contentious overhaul of France’s pension system after it struggled to cobble together enough votes in Parliament. But the maneuver comes at a high political price: Protesters and opposition parties that have painted Mr. Macron as an authoritarian now have more ammunition to mobilize the masses.
Alain Jocard | Afp | Getty ImagesFrench President Emmanuel Macron on Thursday resorted to using special constitutional powers to push his plan to raise the retirement age to 64 from 62 through the lower house of parliament. The plans were passed in France's Senate on Thursday morning but had been due for a vote in the National Assembly (the lower house), where its approval was not guaranteed. Instead, Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne announced to the assembly that the government would trigger Article 49.3 of the French constitution. Macron's Renaissance party argues reform of the pension system is necessary to sustain it long into the future. Household waste containers and rubbish dumps continue to pile up on the pavements of Paris streets on 14 March 2023 since garbage collectors went on strike against the French government's pension reform bill on 6 March 2023.
Protesters attend a demonstration Wednesday in Escaudoeuvres, France, against the government’s pension reform plan. PARIS—Hundreds of thousands of protesters poured into the streets across France on Wednesday, piling pressure on President Emmanuel Macron to ditch his plans to raise the country’s retirement age as the measure heads for a crucial vote in Parliament. Teachers, nurses, train drivers and other workers walked off the job and marched in demonstrations from Paris to Nice, the eighth such protest since unions launched their campaign to oppose Mr. Macron’s overhaul.
Protesters marched Saturday through the streets of Lille, France, during a demonstration over a proposed pension overhaul. PARIS—Around 368,000 people marched against President Emmanuel Macron ’s proposed pension overhaul on Saturday, a drop in turnout for the seventh round of national protests against Mr. Macron’s plan. Saturday’s protest comes after unions stepped up their fight against the pension overhaul on Tuesday, rallying 1.28 million people into the streets in one of France’s largest protests in decades. The far-left CGT and other big French unions said Tuesday’s protest would begin an open-ended strike until the government drops the pension overhaul.
It was a far cry from the barbs Macron traded with Boris Johnson when he was in Downing Street. The French foreign minister at the time, Jean-Yves Le Drian, said France had been "stabbed in the back". Macron's hardball tactics to ensure French fishermen got a good deal had made him the bete noire of British tabloids. But even before news of the AUKUS deal he was incensed by Johnson's decision to leak details of their conversation to the press, a French official said. A French official let out a sigh of relief after it wrapped up: "It went well, didn't it?"
Protesters, in Paris on Tuesday, hope to force the French government to reverse course on its proposed pension overhaul. PARIS—Workers across France walked off the job and took to the streets Tuesday, kicking off what unions are touting as an open-ended standoff with President Emmanuel Macron over his plans to raise the retirement age. Tuesday’s mobilization marks a major escalation in the campaign to stop Mr. Macron’s overhaul. The French leader has withstood several daylong strikes since the start of the year, with two demonstrations each drawing as many as a million protesters.
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