On Thursday, as part of a national day of protests, French workers upset with President Emmanuel Macron and his proposal to raise the pension age blocked entry to a terminal at Paris’ main airport, forcing some travelers to get there on foot.
Wildcat activities by small groups of protestors, who assembled with signs reading “No to the pension change,” stopped roads and access to schools at the Roissy-Charles De Gaulle airport and across the nation.
Smoke was seen rising from smoldering debris heaps blocking traffic on a highway near Toulouse, in the southwest.
According to BFM News footage, unions also stopped the train lines at the Gare de Lyon station in Paris.
Opinion polls have long shown that a majority of voters were opposed to delaying retirement age by two years to 64.
Voters were further angered by the government’s decision last week to push the pension changes through parliament without a vote, and by Macron’s defiant comments on Wednesday.
The president broke weeks of silence on the new policy to say he would stand firm and the law would come into force by the end of they year, at one point comparing the protests to the January 6, 2021 storming of the U.S. Capitol.
Macron’s comments “increased the anger,” Laurent Berger, the head of France’s biggest union, the moderate CFDT, told BFM TV.
“He’s the one setting the country on fire,” Celine Verzeletti of the hardline CGT union, told France Inter.
Electricity output was also cut on Thursday as unions raised pressure on the government to withdraw the law. Flight services will continue to be reduced at the weekend, France’s civil aviation authority said.
Protests also targeted oil depots and blocked an LNG terminal in the northern city of Dunkirk.

A protester, wearing a CGT labour union vest, holds red flares as he attends a demonstration during the ninth day of nationwide strikes and protests against French government’s pension reform, in Nice, France, March 23, 2023. REUTERS/Eric Gaillard
ANGER
Protests against the new law, which also accelerates a planned increase in the number of years one must work to draw a full pension, have drawn huge crowds in rallies organised by unions since January.
Most protests have been peaceful, but anger has mounted since the government bypassed a vote in the lower house of parliament, where it does not have an absolute majority and was not sure to get enough support.
Since then, the past seven nights have seen demonstrations in Paris and other cities with rubbish bins set ablaze and scuffles with police.
The latest wave of protests represents the most serious challenge to the president’s authority since the “Yellow Vest” revolt four years ago.
“It’s a good thing that people are still mobilising, and that people stand up for their beliefs,” 26-year old engineer Jean Walter said at the Paris Saint-Lazare train station, where many trains were cancelled.
Macron said on Wednesday that he had tasked his prime minister, Elisabeth Borne, with finding more support for the government. He said he wanted to involve unions more on upcoming policy changes on issues including schools, health or the environment.
Labour Minister Olivier Dussopt said the government was not in denial about the tensions but wanted to move on.
“There are many subjects which make it possible to renew a dialogue,” he said, including how companies share their profits with workers.
