Despite renewed strikes, France pushes on with pension plan
PARIS — Women workers danced in protest and striking Eiffel Tower employees shuttered France’s most famed monument Friday — but the government pushed ahead anyway with a troubled bill redesigning the national retirement system.
It’s President Emmanuel Macron’s signature reform, aimed at streamlining an increasingly costly system that allows some people to retire as early as their 50s. But it has unleashed 50 days of strikes and new protests in Paris and other cities Friday by unions who see it as an attack on hard-won worker rights, and France’s way of life.
Macron’s government struggled Friday to sell the plan to a skeptical public after the Cabinet approved two bills aimed at enshrining the changes.
The bills leave many questions unanswered, and government ministers dodged questions about a central concern: whether the retirement age will go up, and by how much. Currently French people who have worked a full career can retire with a full pension at 62.