Ignored by Macron, distorted by the media, courted by the Right, snubbed by the Left, the self-organized mass movement known as the Yellow Vests is seriously challenging the political and economic order in France.
In Paris, on the morning of Saturday Dec. 1, as thousands of self-organized Yellow Vest protestors attempted to gather to express their grievances on the Champs-Elysรฉes at a planned, peaceful demonstration, French CRS riot police in Paris attacked them savagely with tear-gas, flash-bombs and water-canons. By the end of the day, cars were burning near the Arc of Triumph, and all of Paris was in chaos as groups of would-be peaceful marchers, joined by the usual casseurs (โsmashersโ) spread throughout the capital, expressing their anger at the system and calling for the resignation of President Macron.
This militarized state over-reaction to a peaceful mass demonstration breaks with a long tradition of tolerance for muscled demonstrations by rowdy angry farmers and militant labor unions. A tolerance Macron, in speeches, has blamed for the failure of previous governments to pass needed pro-business counter-reforms. Predictably, Macron (who must have ordered Saturday morningโs unprovoked, violent attacks on unarmed demonstrators arriving early for the planned march) blamed the victims: โโWhat happened today in Paris has nothing to do with the peaceful expression of legitimate anger,โ he said on Saturday. โNothing justifies attacking the security forces, vandalizing businesses, either private or public ones, or that passers-by or journalists are threatened, or the Arc de Triomphe defaced.โ[1]
Meanwhile, throughout the French provinces, at least 75, 000 Yellow Vest protesters (police estimate) were blocking highway entrances, intersections, and shopping centers all day โ all with minimal violence and apparent general approval (80% according to recent polls).
Why Franceโs โSilent Majorityโ Is Mad as Hell
Like all the spontaneous mass uprisings that dot French history going back to Feudal times, the Yellow Vest revolt was initially provoked by taxes. In this case, the straw that broke the camelโs back was Macronโs decision to increase taxes gas and Diesel fuel, which affect ordinary working and lower-middle class French people dependent on their cars to earn a living. The rebels, donning the yellow breakdown-safety vests they are required to keep in their cars by the government, have been on the warpath for three weeks now. Spurning all political parties, the Yellow Vests got organized on social media and acted locally. The broadcast media, although highly critical, spread the news nationally, and the Yellow Vest movement spread across France, blocking intersections, filtering motorists, and gathering to demonstrate, more and more numerous and militant, on successive Saturdays.
Why Saturdays? โI canโt go on strike,โ explains one woman. โIโm raising three kids alone. My job, thatโs all I have left. Coming on Saturdays is the only way for me to show my anger.โ Women โ receptionists, hostesses, nurses-aids, teachers โ are present in unusually large numbers in these crowds, and they are angry about a lot more than the tax on Diesel.
To begin with, inequality. Like Trump, Macron has showered corporations and millionaires with huge tax cuts, creating a hole in the budget which he has compensated by cuts in public services (hospitals, schools, transit, police) and by tax increases for ordinary people (up to 40% of their income), large numbers of whom are struggling hard to make ends meet and going into debt. โWeโre hungry and weโre fed up,โ said Jessica Monnier, 28, who works in a watch factory in the French Alps. She earns $1, 140 a month, and said: โOnce I pay my bills, I donโt have enough to eat. Weโre just hungry, thatโs all.โ[2]
This anger has been building since last Spring, the 50th anniversary of the 1968 worker-student uprising, but was frustrated when Macron won the stand-off with labor over his neo-liberal, pro-business counter-reforms. This labor defeat was facilitated by the leadership of the CGT and other unions, played the same negative role in the 1968 sell-out to de Gaulle. A half-century later the French union leaders, eager to keep their place at the political table (and on the government payroll), avoided a major confrontation, met with the government behind the scenes, and only went through the motions of carrying out strikes, spreading them over months and tiring out the workers. [Please see my โFrench Laborโs Historical Defeatโ
http://divergences.be/spip.php?article3348]
Macron is also hated for his truly monarchical arrogance, ruling alone like Louis XIV, imposing his will by decrees, ignoring his opponents and patronizing the common people in a pedantic style that humiliates and enrages them. By dismissing the Yellow Vests, haughtily refusing to address their issues, and then violently repressing them despite their popularity, Macron has revealed the vast gap between his authoritarian, neo-liberal regime and the mass of the French population. The French elected him in 2016, in the run-off following the first round collapse of the traditional parties of the Left and the Right. Macron was a stop-gap to prevent the election of Marine LePen of the extreme-right, openly racist National Front. He has no real mandate and no political party behind him, despite an unorganized parlementary majority.
This Saturday, the demonstrators were heard booing the TV network people on Place de la Concorde, furious at being been presented as deliberate vandals , calling the press โUsurpers,โ โWe wanted to come and demonstrate calmly,โ said one fifty-ish Yellow Vest interviewed by Mรฉdiapart. I came by train, I had my ID card in my pocket. They threw so much tear-gas at us that we ran like rabbits.โ He then held out a rubber cartridge. โThey even fired Flash-balls at usโ he added as two nearby women nodded. โWho are the Vandals?โ
Another would-be demonstrator, Franck, from nearby Seine-et-Marne, added: โWe came to the Champs-Elysรฉes this morning and when we tried to approach the entry-points, we were immediately inundated with tear-gas, 300 meters before the check-points.โ Furious, he spits out โMacron gasses his own people like Bashar el-Assad!โ
Maritรฉ, a retiree from the suburbs, kept repeating over and over: โI confess before the CGT that I voted for Macron, and beg your forgiveness.โ She has worked for 42 years, her husband for 44; together their retirement comes to $3, 200 a month and their anger is deep. A woman named Morgane hisses through clenched teeth a phrase heard all over France since the beginning of the movement: โMarie-Antoinette was living high off the hog just before the Revolution also. And they cut off her head.โ[3]
What was remarkable at this Saturdayโs chaotic mass outbreak in the streets of Paris was the fortuitous convergence of the Yellow Vests with previously scheduled demonstrations organized by the CGT and other unions as well as the feminist MeToo movement, the LGBT movement. So happenstance created the first real dialogue between members of these disparate movements which took place under clouds of tear-gas as the various demonstrators, driven away from the Champs-Elysรฉes area by the police, wandered through the half-empty streets.
A start. Angry French people waited all Spring for the promised โconvergenceโ of the various unions of students and workers united against Macronโs reactionary anti-reforms which the leaders never organized, leaving the different groups of strikers isolated.
Popular Risings, Elite Contempt
The French popular classes have long historical memories, and seem unaffected by the postmodern scholarly denigration of the 1789 French Revolution and its successors as useless explosions of popular violence which inevitable led to bloody dictatorships. Morgane knows all she needs to know about the guillotine. According to Gรฉrard Noiriel, author of a monumental history of France โfrom below,โ โThe Yellow Vests who block highways and refuse to be coopted by political parties have taken up, in confused form, the tradition of the Sans-culottes of 1792-93, the citizen-combatants of February 1848, the Communards of 1870-71 and the anarcho-syndicalists of the Banquet Years.โ[4]
Indeed, these traditions go back much earlier, to the Feudal period, with its periodic uprisings of peasants burning landlordโs chateaux and urban rioters taking over towns. What changed in late 18th Century France was the development of roads and mail service, that enabled revolutionary Committees of Correspondence to coordinate and organize discontent on a national level. Today, Internet social networks and network news play the same role in real time.
Like todayโs Yellow Vest rebellion, all these historical uprisings were initially about excessive unfair taxes, like the Tithe of 10% (imposed by the wealthy Catholic Church on the poor), the royal Gabelle tax on salt (necessary for life and preserving foodstuffs) and the Corvรฉe (days of free labor owed to the noble landlord, the Church and the government.) Although violent, these spontaneous, self-organized risings eventually led to the democratic republic, the Rights of Man, free secular education, etc. (all under threat today)
The other common denominator between the Yellow Vests and historical popular movements is the near-universal contempt with which they were (are) treated by Franceโs elite classes: the royalty, the nobility, the upper clergy, official academic historians, and today the media and the leadership of the unions and Left parties, who have joined the establishment and are an integral part of what the French call the โpolitical class.โ
Not so much has changed since the Old Regime. Then, the nobles derisively referred to any peasant as โJacques Bonhommeโ (Goodfellow Jack), and to their violent uprisings as โJacqueries.โ Around 1360 the revered French chronicler Jean Froissart reported: โThese evil folk assembled together without a leader and without arms were stealing and burning everything and killing without pity and without merci, like rabid dogs. And they made a king among them who was the worst of the bad; and this king they called Jacques Bonhomme.โ
Class prejudice. In fact, says Noiriel, the archives show the peasants selected as their spokesman one Guillaume Carle, known to be โa good thinker and a good talker.โ
Similarly, for three weeks the government, the media, and even the Left (parties and unions) have been attempting to present the Yellow Vests as red-necks and/or vandals, while reducing their generalized anger to the issue of gas taxes. On one TV broadcast, the reporter kept trying to get the Yellow Vest being interviewed to say she was rebelling against taxes, but the woman kept repeating over and over: โFed up to the ass-hole,โ โWeโve had it up to the ass,โ โEverything.โ[5]
The organized Left showed little sympathy for this, self-organized, autonomous (albeit amorphous) uprising of desperate and angry lower middle class people who, out of long experience, reject domination by union and party leaders. Plus, they live in places no one has heard of and sing the Marseillaise (originally a revolutionary song, but who remembers?) More, the color โYellowโ used to stand for โscab unions.โ So the unions and Left parties, as usual embroiled in infighting among each other, instead of supporting the Yellow Vestsโ struggle against Macron and offering leadership by example, left the field open to the Right. LePenโs people (also embroiled in internal squabbles) attempted to manipulate the movement and made little headway, as did belatedly Melanchon.
France in Crisis?
Hegemonic Balance Sheet:
An autocratic President without a party or a mandate. Crowds calling for him to resign. A desperate lower class population angry over growing economic inequality in a rich country and government indifference to their plight. A class of organized civil servants and unionized workers still licking their wounds and paying their bills after failing to block the Presidentโs counter-reforms last Spring.
Traditional parties โ Left (Socialists, etc.) and Right (Gaullists etc.) โ that have alternated in power since the end of WWII diminished and eclipsed. The parties of the far Left (Melanchon, various Trotskyists, etc.) and the far Right (the former National Front) are too preoccupied with internal fights to play any significant role..
Powerful, effective mass media dominated by the interests of big business but viewed with suspicion by more and more of the population.
A brand-new โleaderlessโ spontaneous mass movement connected by social media, โfinding its way by walking,โ more or less consciously embedded in a long history of rebellions and struggle, finding its natural leaders (โgood thinkers, good talkersโ like old Guillaume Carle), putting forth its own ideas for the reorganization of society.
Here are the two latest proposals coming from the Yellow Vests and borrowed from the history the 18th Century French revolution. First, a call for a kind of democratic constituent assembly. Second, the creation of Cahiers de dolรฉances (Grievance Notebooks) like the ones in 1788 listing all the peopleโs complaints and proposed remedies. Both great ideas. We can only hope that given the hollowness of the hegemony of the French political class, the convenience of social media for self-organization, and the desperate desire for dignity and participatory democracy incarnated in this latest historical uprising, something good may come of it.
Meanwhile, here are excerpts from the 2018 Yellow Vest Grievance list[6]:
No one left homeless.
ยง End the austerity policy. Cancel the interest on illegitimate debt. Donโt tax the poor to pay it back, find the 85 billion Euros of fiscal fraud uncollected.
ยง Create a true integration policy, with French language, history and civics courses for immigrants.
ยง Minimum salary โฌ1500 per month
ยง Privilege city and village centers. Stop building huge shopping centers.
ยง More progressive income tax rates.
ยง Big companies like Mac Donaldโs, Google, Amazon and Carrefour should pay big taxes, and little artisans low taxes.
[1] https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/01/world/europe/france-yellow-vests-protests-macron.html
[2] https://www.nytimes.com/2018/11/28/opinion/france-protests-yellow-vests.html
[3] Quotations translated from https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/france/011218/les-gilets-jaunes-debordent-dans-les-rues-de-paris
[4] https://noiriel.wordpress.com/2018/11/21/les-gilets-jaunes-et-les-lecons-de-lhistoire/
[5] ยซ on en a ras le cul ยป , ยซ ras le cul ยป, ยซ ras le bol gรฉnรฉralisรฉโ BFM-TV, Nov.17, reported in https://noiriel.wordpress.com/2018/11/21/les-gilets-jaunes-et-les-lecons-de-lhistoire/
[6] https://aplutsoc.org/2018/12/01/la-methode-des-cahiers-de-doleances-par-robert-duguet/ great long list
Not so quick–as they say, all that glitters is not gold!
Here’s a very sharp and critical assessment of the yellow vests from a veteran activist in Paris:
Yellow is the color of the strike breakers
Friday, November 23, 2018
While the extreme left (or even beyond) swoons in front of the “yellow vests” (yellow is traditionally in the labor movement the color of strikebreakers) some isolated voices stand before the consensus media-political as that of the “Line of Peaks” website by putting forward solid arguments. We may not agree with everything contained in the article below, but approve the essential: no to the sacred union of autonomous radicals to Marine Le Pen, through Dupont-Aignan, Laurent Wauquiez, Mรฉlenchon, Lutte Ouvriรจre, the NPA, Besancenot and the Identitaires! Those who denounce Trump and Bolsonaro do not see that this movement of yellow vests rests on the same heterogeneous social bases that brought them to power, the same ideological confusion (in which the extreme right and the extreme left are recognized, the latter having abandoned all class lines), the same means (the social networks where masked fascists practice deverveling for years), the same program (in reality to suppress all the social conquests, results of collective struggles, in the name of a so-called radical criticism of the state and the defense of taxpayers’ rights), the same theories of conspiracy (Macron and the “banks”) and the same nationalist and xenophobic impulses.
YC, No Country or Borders, November 23, 2018
No swooning seems like a good slogan!
John