Authorities deployed 80,000 police and gendarmes nationwide, backed by riot units, drones, and armored vehicles. By midday, 58 arrests had been made, including 11 in Paris, according to police. French daily Le Figaro reported as many as 900,000 people were expected to join the day of action.
The “Bloquons Tout” (“Block Everything”) protest movement, launched on Sept. 10, expanded Thursday with broad participation from teachers, rail workers, pharmacists, farmers, and students.
- France’s SNCF rail operator reported “some disruptions” to high-speed trains but said most services would continue running.
- Pharmacies staged widespread walkouts, with 95 percent shuttering in protest against new rules on generic drugs that unions say could close nearly one-third of businesses.
- France’s high school union, SNES-FSU, said 45 percent of teachers joined the strike.
Social media footage showed masked youths setting off flares at the Finance Ministry in Bercy and blocking tramlines in Paris.
The unrest poses an early test for Lecornu, 39, who became France’s fourth prime minister in a year after François Bayrou’s government collapsed earlier this month over austerity plans. Bayrou’s proposal to cut €43.8 billion ($51.3 billion) by 2026, including axing Easter Monday and Victory Day holidays, triggered widespread outrage.
Seeking to ease tensions, Lecornu scrapped the holiday cuts and announced reduced lifetime benefits for former government ministers, a symbolic move expected to save €4.4 million annually. He has also opened talks with opposition leaders and unions in hopes of avoiding a no-confidence vote in the deeply fractured Parliament.
Unions and left-wing parties urged continued mobilization. Jean-Luc Mélenchon, leader of France Insoumise (LFI), cautioned against provocation: “Refuse any disorder, because that is what the Interior Minister hopes for to justify his habitual violence against the people.”
By contrast, conservatives framed the strikes as destructive. Laurent Wauquiez, leader of Les Républicains, said: “While there are those who block everything and destroy everything, there is a France that works, gets up early, and pays its taxes. It is the voice of this silent majority that must be defended.”
Far-right National Rally leader Marine Le Pen predicted Lecornu’s failure and called for new elections.
As parts of the world prepare to witness a solar eclipse on September 21, France will face its own moment of darkness with another nationwide strike scheduled on the very same day. Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu confronts the daunting task of balancing EU budget demands, swelling public anger, and a fractured Parliament where President Macron’s centrist alliance no longer commands a majority. The fragility of France’s leadership was already exposed by the collapse of François Bayrou’s cabinet on Sept. 8, leaving Lecornu as the nation’s fourth prime minister in just a year.
That instability may be tested further as France steps onto the global stage with a momentous move: its plan to recognize a Palestinian state at the United Nations on Sept. 22. The announcement is scheduled just after Yom Teruah, the biblical Feast of Trumpets, during the solemn “Days of Awe” leading to Yom Kippur. Prophecy watchers see the timing as significant, interpreting France’s internal unrest and international choices as part of a larger drama shaping its destiny in Europe and the Middle East.
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