France
scraps youth job law
reuters ^ |
4/10/06 | Elizabeth Pineau
This article is important because this Job law did affect white European
children in France it affected mostly muslim youth that had have cited elsewhere
almost a 70 percent unemployment rate. The law in France is one you hire some
one hey are basically hired for life with full benefits. In France this is a huge
capitulation to rioters that were predominantly Muslim.
Last Month we saw in Denmark Muslims flip their first election now
in France we see them successfully prevent the government from reducing pay and
benefits to a foreign workforce that has little to contribute. The noose of
slavery continues to slowly tighten around the white and Christian slaves by
their Muslim lords. As their numbers increase with their birth rates it will
only be increasingly difficult for European governments to resist the demands
of their new masters.
How long will it be until they use democracy and voting to begin
persecuting the Jews and Christians? Yes, it is coming. The Lord says that the Jews and Christians in
the EU and in Muslim countries need to move from their churches and Synagogues
and prepare underground movements.
Posted on 04/10/2006 6:10:21 AM PDT
PARIS (Reuters) - French
President Jacques Chirac on Monday scrapped a planned youth job law that
provoked weeks of protests, in a climbdown opponents celebrated as an
unqualified victory. ADVERTISEMENT
The move was a personal blow to
Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin, who had championed the First Job Contract
(CPE) and seen his popularity slump with the mass opposition and unrest.
In a televised statement,
Villepin said he regretted that weeks of strikes and protests showed the CPE
could not be applied but gave no details about his own political future, on the
line over his handling of the dispute.
"The necessary conditions
of confidence and calm are not there, either among young people, or companies,
to allow the application of the First Job Contract," Villepin said, adding
he would open talks with unions on youth employment.
Students had planned fresh
marches for Tuesday and it was unclear if they would call off their strikes and
a blockade of many universities and high schools after the announcement.
Villepin championed the CPE
contract as a means of reducing youth unemployment and saw his poll ratings
plunge as opposition to the measures mounted, damaging his chances of becoming
the ruling UMP party's candidate for president in elections in 2007.
"The president of the
republic has decided to replace article 8 of the equal opportunities law with
measures to help disadvantaged young people find work," an earlier
statement from the presidency said.
"CPE IS DEAD"
The new measures include
increased financial incentives to employers to hire people under 26 who face
the most difficulties in getting access to the labor market, Employment
Minister Jean-Louis Borloo said in an interview with Le Monde newspaper.
That would apply to
approximately 159,000 young people currently hired under government-subsidized
job contracts and the cost to the government would be around 150 million euros
($180 million) in the second half of 2006, Borloo said.
Those measures could be
introduced in parliament as early this week, a senior UMP deputy said.
France's youth unemployment
stands at 22 percent and lack of jobs is the country's number one political
issue and a major reason for weeks of rioting in poor suburbs late last year.
Chirac and Villepin were careful
in their statements to say that the CPE was being "replaced," but
others called it dead.
"The players in the crisis
have difficulty pronouncing the words repeal. The CPE is dead, the CPE seems to
be finished ... and I think they must have the courage finally to say it
clearly," Julie Coudry, president of the student confederation, said on
LCI television.
Benjamin Vetele, vice president
of the UNEF student union, called on students to keep up the pressure.
"This is a first and
decisive victory. There is reason to be satisfied ... We call (on students) to
maintain the pressure now as we await the new law," he said on French
radio.
Dominique Paille, a UMP deputy
considered close to Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy who had for weeks called
for a compromise on the contract, said: "The president of the republic is
withdrawing the CPE. It's a measure that corresponds with what the entire population
has been waiting for."
Sarkozy, vilified by many
protesters, is the head of the ruling party and a rival with Villepin for the
party's candidacy for president next year when Chirac is expected to step down.
The opposition Socialist Party
has yet to name its candidate but stands to gain from opposition to the CPE.
A poll for Liberation newspaper
showed Villepin's popularity stood at 49 percent in the first week of January
and had fallen to 25 percent this weekend. Negative opinion of Chirac rose from
56 percent to 64 percent over the same period.
The poll also showed 63 percent
of voters said Socialist ideas on reform were no better than those of the
right.