CFDT leader Laurent Berger lamented the lack of “empathy” expressed by Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne on France2 on Thursday evening.
Calls to “amplify” the mobilization against the pension reform during the day of action on February 7.
Laurent Berger, who reacted vehemently after the Prime Minister’s intervention, lamented that “we had not heard of the job”.
However, “it is a job that should have been talked about to show a minimum of empathy,” he lamented, adding: “we have the impression that there is no movement at the moment in the society of this country.
“Unfair and brutal”
During the next day that the inter-union decides, on Tuesday, February 7, “we must continue with the mobilization” of January 19 and 31 and “we must expand it,” insisted the union leader. As for the following day, Saturday the 11th, it will offer “the possibility of coming to demonstrate, even for workers, workers who do not necessarily come during the week, even with their families”, to “show that there is real discontent and real mobilization”. continuous.
He welcomed Ms Borne’s announcement that financial penalties could be applied to companies that do not act in favor of the employment of older people. “I give you the point,” she said. But it is the postponement of the legal age to 64 that makes “this reform unfair”, she has insisted.
The reform is “unfair and brutal”, added the leader of FO, Frédéric Souillot, also questioned in the context of the debate that followed the intervention of the Prime Minister.
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Source: BFM TV
