Quentin Mitchell|French farmers edge closer to Paris as protests ratchet up pressure on President Macron

2025-05-06 09:08:57source:Chainkeencategory:Finance

Snowballing protests by French farmers crept closer to Paris on Quentin MitchellThursday, with tractors driving in convoys and blocking roads in many regions of the country to ratchet up pressure for government measures to protect the influential agricultural sector from foreign competition, red tape, rising costs and poverty-levels of pay for the worst-off producers.

Traffic-snarling drive-slows, barricades of straw bales, stinky dumps of agricultural waste outside government offices and other demonstrations have rapidly blown up to become the first major crisis for newly appointed Prime Minister Gabriel Attal, installed two weeks ago by President Emmanuel Macron in hopes of injecting new vigor into his administration.

Macron’s opponents are seizing on the farmers’ demonstrations to bash his government’s record ahead of European elections in June. Far-right leader Marine Le Pen, whose National Rally party is polling strongly, blamed free-trade agreements, imports and bureaucracy for farmers’ economic woes.

“The worst enemies of farmers are to be found in this government,” she said Thursday.

Other news Grant Hill explains the decision surrounding Draymond Green’s omission from the Olympic poolFrance’s president seeks a top-5 medal ranking for his country at the Paris OlympicsAn explosive case of police violence in the Paris suburbs ends with the conviction of 3 officers

Roads hit Thursday morning by drive-slows included a highway west of the French capital and seat of power. “We are getting progressively closer to Paris,” farmer David Lavenant said to broadcaster BFM-TV.

BFM-TV images from Agen, in southwest France, showed a supermarket being showered with a thick jet of pig slurry. There were roadblocks and other demonstrations elsewhere.

In Brussels, EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen opened a discussion panel to try to put farming on a new footing, hoping to take into account some of the complaints raised by protesters around the 27-nation bloc.

The so-called strategic dialogue comes as campaigning for the June 6-9 EU parliamentary elections is picking up steam and the fate of the farm sector is expected to be a hot-button issue.

“We all agree that the challenges are, without any question, mounting, said von der Leyen, be it “competition from abroad, be it overregulation at home, be it climate change, or the loss of biodiversity, or be a demographic decline, just to name a few of the challenges.

In recent weeks, farmers have staged protests in Germany, the Netherlands, Poland and Romania.

More:Finance

Recommend

The 'Rebel Ridge' trailer is here: Get an exclusive first look at Netflix movie

In the new Netflix action thriller “Rebel Ridge,” Don Johnson has ventured far from the heroic likes

'Sleepless in Seattle' at 30: Real-life radio host Delilah still thinks love conquers all

“Sleepless In Seattle,” director Nora Ephron’s iconic take on a drawn-out meet cute hit theaters 30

Ex-Proud Boys organizer gets 17 years in prison, second longest sentence in Jan. 6 Capitol riot case

WASHINGTON (AP) — A former organizer of the far-right Proud Boys extremist group was sentenced on Th