France Mobilizes Emergency Fuel Stocks

 
Riot police stand guard behind a fire as refinery workers hold a blockade of the oil depot of Douchy-Les-Mines to protest against the government's proposed labour reforms, on May 25, 2016. Refinery workers stepped up strikes that threaten to paralyse France weeks ahead of the Euro 2016 tournament as the government moved to break their blockades, escalating a three-month tug-of-war over labour reforms. / AFP / François LO PRESTI (Photo credit should read FRANCOIS LO PRESTI/AFP/Getty Images)

FRANCOIS LO PRESTI/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Riot police watch as a wall of flame separates them from refinery workers blockading the oil depot of Douchy-les-Mines, via Huffington Post

Now things are getting interesting.

We’re on the eighth day of “industrial action” here to protest changes to France’s cherished, preposterous labor laws. This morning dock workers stormed the port city at Le Havre. Striking workers have cut off roads and bridges and blockaded a nuclear submarine base. Today, workers at nuclear power plants joined the strike. The almighty CGT — a trade union that descends directly from communists — has been blocking oil refineries, causing fuel shortages and endless lines at gas stations. France has mobilized its strategic oil reserves for the first time since 2010.

President François Hollande says there are supplies sufficient to last 115 days. Keep that number in mind.

The situation is particularly fraught because Prime Minister Manuel Valls pushed the so-called El-Khomri law (named after Labor Minister Myriam El Khomri) through the National Assembly without a vote. This is, technically, permitted under the constitution of the Fifth Republic, and the power has been used about 50 times since 1958. But it’s obviously problematic to have a constitution that permits this. Just as it’s obviously problematic to have an unelected, radical labor union violently holding the country hostage.

Hollande and Valls probably went the Article 49-3 route — neo-Louis XIV style — because they didn’t think they had the numbers to get the law through parliament. And if so, they were probably right. MPs from their own party are now trying to pass motions of censure against the government; yesterday, they failed — by just two votes — to initiate a vote of no-confidence. This is their own party. Libération described the scenes in the parliament as “grotesque,” which sounds about right.

The CGT would appear to be betting that the party is divided, that it can readily make life a misery for everyone in France, and that this will force Hollande and Valls to back down. They know Hollande’s not a brawler. He’s never had the stomach for an all-out fight with the unions, and nor has any French president, for that matter. Traditionally, the government caves or compromises in the face of this kind of pressure. Strikes like this usually aren’t viewed as unacceptable, anarchic, and undemocratic, as they would be in the US. They’re seen as a vehicle for democratic expression and even a normal prelude to negotiation.

But this time might be different. For one thing, a psychological barrier, or several of them, really, have been crossed. France is already under emergency rule. The EU is on the verge of a crack-up. France’s inability to get its house in order is a part of the problem and everyone knows it. If the government can’t make even these sensible, modest changes to its absurd labor laws, France’s future is grim. If France’s future is grim, so is Europe’s.

I’m not sure how these circumstances will affect public opinion or Hollande’s psychology. It seems to me it might stiffen his resolve. It certainly should. The CGT only represents three percent of France’s workforce, and it has its own vulnerability: It’s in a power struggle with the other unions. Its main rival, the CFDT, backs the new labor law. Union elections are ahead next year. The CFDT is betting Hollande will stick it out, and if he does, it will give them credibility to campaign against the CGT as the antediluvian, job-killing, radical dinosaur it is. That could mean the end of the CGT as a major force in French politics.

The CGT is putting pressure on the country’s strategic nodes — petrochemicals, ports, and railways — which is illegal under French law. Philippe Martinez, the head of the CGT, is justifying this by saying the passage of the law itself is so obviously anti-democratic as to warrant uproar, given that first, it contravenes the Socialist Party’s manifesto; second, it hasn’t been approved by parliament; and third, polls show that public opinion is against it.

Hollande and Valls seem to be betting that the CGT doesn’t have the support to expand the strikes to the level of a genuine strategic threat, and that public opinion will swing against them if the fuel shortages and the violence continue. I don’t know if they’re right, and they probably don’t, either.

The European football championship starts on June 10. Valls has made a huge point of stressing that the championship will go on despite terrorist threats. The unions are betting that he’ll do anything to avoid the embarrassment of disruptions to the event and will cave to them before facing that humiliation.

Hollande and Valls seem to me to be in the right in every way except one: They truly don’t have a democratic mandate. As Sylvain Attal puts it,

Hollande is not just facing opposition to the labour bill, he is also confronting a fundamental, systemic opposition held by a growing fringe of the parliamentary majority. He has broken promises made on the campaign trail and does not have public opinion on his side. What’s more, he has barely a year more in office. Therefore, he must face the hard fact that to break the current impasse, he needs to go back to the voters.

He can do this in two ways: either the French leader calls for a referendum, thereby putting his job on the line; or he dissolves parliament. This is the spirit of our democratic institutions.

If Hollande decides to do neither it’ll be because he knows the results would be fatal in both cases and he’ll then instead be hoping for some sort of miracle before the 2017 presidential election. …

We’re going to be stuck in this climate of confrontation and violence in the weeks, and perhaps months, to come. Between the two sides sticking to their guns (the government with Article 49-3, the police brutally suppressing protesters), and the CGT trying to take the country hostage by attacking public transportation and refineries – and behind them, the anarchists and thugs they no longer control – France is in a mess. This is distressing because France will be lagging behind and the world will not wait for the country to play catch-up.

Hollande and Valls have vowed to stand firm, but we’ll see.

I can’t help but be put in mind of the miner’s strike. Arthur Scargill’s fatal mistake was to call a coal strike in the spring. It’s springtime in Paris, and if the government really has supplies to last 115 days, and if they have the willpower, they might — finally — be able to break the CGT and enforce this law. There really is no alternative.

But Thatcher had her party on her side, and Hollande doesn’t. Thatcher faced a weak, divided political opposition, the Labour Party having suffered one of its worst-ever defeats in the 1983 election. Hollande’s party is itself weak and divided, and Hollande is the one who’s apt to face crushing defeat in 2017.

So who knows. It’s a nail-biter.

Meanwhile, France’s kung-fu cop has gone viral on Twitter:

Interesting times. I wish I could tell you how this book will end. All I can say for now is that the plot is getting more dramatic:

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There are 44 comments.

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  1. Claire Berlinski, Ed. Member
    Claire Berlinski, Ed.
    @Claire

    BrentB67:The Kung Fu cop needs to learn how to draw a weapon and use it timely.

    I would never go viral as a Kung Fu cop because after the first lash there would be a bang.

    As you can see, he considered it, and then correctly assessed that the situation didn’t require it.

    • #31
  2. Casey Inactive
    Casey
    @Casey

    James Gawron:…..psssssst…Casey, don’t tell them you’re from Pittsburgh. They’re still very sensitive. Just say you live close to Fort Duquesne. Trust me on this. I think the Pirate thing is OK.

    Regards,

    Jim

    Oui… Fort Pitt – I spit!

    • #32
  3. Matt Bartle Member
    Matt Bartle
    @MattBartle

    Claire Berlinski, Ed.: Increasingly I’m finding it a wonderment that human beings ever managed to create functional democracies and market economies in the first place

    Very important point – I wish we reflected on this more, in order to appreciate what we have. The natural state of humanity is more poverty and tyranny than it is freedom and affluence.

    • #33
  4. Roberto Inactive
    Roberto
    @Roberto

    What happens if a no-confidence vote is called and Hollande loses? Is there anyone waiting in the wings who could realistically form a new government?

    Correct me if I am wrong but Hollande is only still there simply because there is no one else, after all he is quite detested. If there were a viable replacement one would think it already would have occurred, however you are of course closer to events so is there someone else?

    • #34
  5. Casey Inactive
    Casey
    @Casey

    Jim,

    I have fuel stocks to last 115 days.  Unless the Pens win tonight.

    Duquesne

    • #35
  6. Mountain Mike Inactive
    Mountain Mike
    @MichaelFarrow

    BrentB67:The Kung Fu cop needs to learn how to draw a weapon and use it timely.

    I would never go viral as a Kung Fu cop because after the first lash there would be a bang.

    Hmmm, I’ve heard of “flash bangs”, but not lash bangs!

    • #36
  7. Eric Hines Inactive
    Eric Hines
    @EricHines

    Claire Berlinski, Ed.: I used to think a situation like this would prompt large majorities of people to think, “This is stupid. How on earth can we expect to compete against countries where you’re allowed to hire and fire people more readily? This law must go, and these rioters must be locked up.”

    They don’t see that they’re competing against any other country.  Not in nation that thinks taxes are the way to go and that labor competition is anathema.  Not in a Europe that objects to tax rate competition and demands the Luxembourgs and Irelands of the world–and us–raise tax rates to EU levels in order to protect EU constituents from competition.

    Eric Hines

    • #37
  8. Claire Berlinski, Ed. Member
    Claire Berlinski, Ed.
    @Claire

    Roberto:

    What happens if a no-confidence vote is called and Hollande loses?

    No one really knows because a no-confidence vote has only once succeeded during the Fifth Republic. (It was used to oust the government of Georges Pompidou.) The left is so fractured that I doubt anyone could, realistically, form a new government. What’s going on is really unheard of — the Socialists are trying to overthrow their own government.

    Is there anyone waiting in the wings who could realistically form a new government?

    Correct me if I am wrong but Hollande is only still there simply because there is no one else, after all he is quite detested. If there were a viable replacement one would think it already would have occurred, however you are of course closer to events so is there someone else?

    • #38
  9. Eric Hines Inactive
    Eric Hines
    @EricHines

    Claire Berlinski, Ed.: What’s going on is really unheard of — the Socialists are trying to overthrow their own government.

    I don’t entirely agree about the unheardness of it.  It’s of a piece with the Left’s solution to any failure: execution is poorly done; therefore, do more and do it better.

    These Socialists are simply contemplating Hollande’s poor execution of the Socialist paradigm, and perforce, the corrective answer is to toss him and get someone else to do more Socialism better.

    Oh, and protect their paymasters, the unions.

    Eric Hines

    • #39
  10. Eric Hines Inactive
    Eric Hines
    @EricHines

    BrentB67:The Kung Fu cop needs to learn how to draw a weapon and use it timely.

    I would never go viral as a Kung Fu cop because after the first lash there would be a bang.

    Well, there’s your problem, Brent.  I’d skip the lash step and go…viral…from the start.

    Eric Hines

    • #40
  11. BrentB67 Inactive
    BrentB67
    @BrentB67

    Claire Berlinski, Ed.:

    BrentB67:The Kung Fu cop needs to learn how to draw a weapon and use it timely.

    I would never go viral as a Kung Fu cop because after the first lash there would be a bang.

    As you can see, he considered it, and then correctly assessed that the situation didn’t require it.

    I don’t share his assessment.

    • #41
  12. Phil Turmel Inactive
    Phil Turmel
    @PhilTurmel

    I’ll be visiting my in-laws in Bordeaux in mid July.  I’m expecting some rousing kitchen table political talks, and not just between the gun-toting American and the French — the men among my inlaws are pro-EU greens and the women are, well, not so much.

    If there are any Ricochetti in the Bordeaux area, I might want to call for reinforcements. :-)

    • #42
  13. BrentB67 Inactive
    BrentB67
    @BrentB67

    Eric Hines:

    BrentB67:The Kung Fu cop needs to learn how to draw a weapon and use it timely.

    I would never go viral as a Kung Fu cop because after the first lash there would be a bang.

    Well, there’s your problem, Brent. I’d skip the lash step and go…viral…from the start.

    Eric Hines

    I think they call that murder.

    The guy has to at least show hostile intent. Then the safety comes off.

    I like your spirit thought.

    • #43
  14. Eric Hines Inactive
    Eric Hines
    @EricHines

    BrentB67:

    Eric Hines:

    BrentB67:The Kung Fu cop needs to learn how to draw a weapon and use it timely.

    I would never go viral as a Kung Fu cop because after the first lash there would be a bang.

    Well, there’s your problem, Brent. I’d skip the lash step and go…viral…from the start.

    Eric Hines

    I think they call that murder.

    The guy has to at least show hostile intent. Then the safety comes off.

    I like your spirit thought.

    You flatter me, Sir.  I have hands of thunder and lightning, and there surely would be the cracks and bangs, but a couple of my punches are unlikely to kill….

    Eric Hines

    • #44
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