So far, the various inter-union mobilizations against the pension reform have developed without major incidents. Therefore, the executive is not in a position to denounce a possible radicalization of this social movement and is obliged to recognize its scope.
According to Sandrine Rousseau, interviewed on BFMTV-RMC, “the government must take responsibility for this.”
“I think that if he persists in his confinement and in his inability to understand that this reform is extremely massively rejected by the French and French, then yes, it is possible that part of the movement will become radicalized,” warns the environmentalist deputy. from Paris
“Does it take excess, violence and aggressiveness to be heard?”
At the moment, “there is a calm and determined mass,” he calmly stresses. For their part, the unions want to confront the contradictions with the executive. At the “peak of their mobilization, the yellow vests gathered 284,000 people with unfortunately too much violence on the part of some people”, but “answers have been given”, recalls Laurent Berger, head of the CFDT, in The cross.
Tuesday, January 31, “1.27 million people peacefully rejected the reform in the streets,” he underlined to better legitimize the demands of the social movement.
“What would be the perspective if [ces personnes] you didn’t get an answer? Do we need excess, violence and aggressiveness to be heard?”, she asks herself, still in The cross.
“It is not a threat,” defends Laurent Berger at the time, although he considers that “we can only respond to this social tension through the democratic exercise of power.” According to him, “this also implies listening to society.”
Source: BFM TV
