
On Wednesday, the new Prime Minister of France, Sébastien Lecorn, promised to prevent a “deep break” from the previous leadership when the difficult task of forming a government capable of providing a country from an ongoing political crisis, as stated by AFP.
Here are the first ten updates:
1. Lecorn’s first day in office was marked by extensive protests on the street against President Emmanuel Macron, while the demonstrators met the police. The protests that gained traction on the social media under the slogan “Block Everything” had mixed effects across the country. Nevertheless, the participation exceeded the participation of traditional demonstrations of 1 May.
The Demonstrator passes through the trash container at the end of the demonstration on the site of the de la 2 -September 2025. September and September at September and September at September and September at September at September and September at September and September at September and September and closed and closed. Rosa / AFP)
2. The deployment of 80,000 police officers spread the barricade and pulled hundreds of protesting into custody, but the flashes multiplied. In Rennes the bus was ignited. In the southwest, electrical cables were interrupted, train services and growling operation were stopped.
3. In the evening, the Minister of the Interior Bruno Retailleau said that nearly 200,000 people took the streets across the country, while the CGT Union, one of the largest French work confederations, claimed closer to 250,000, AP reported.
4. His ministry reported more than 450 arrests, hundreds of custody, more than a dozen officers of injured and more than 800 protest actions – from assembly to street fires – across the country. Retailleau called the day “defeat for those who wanted to block the country”. Yet the government’s own sum told another story.
5. Protests “Bloquons Tout” or “Block Everything” did not correspond to the extent of the French yellow rebellion in 2018, but still underlined the cycle of unrest that chased Macron’s Presidency: mass deployment, violence and repeated clashes between government and streets.
6. After its re -election in 2022, Macron faced fire over unpopular pension reforms and nationwide riots and riots and riots in 2023 after a deadly police shooting teenager at the Paris edges.
Yet the demonstrations and sporadic clashes with the police rebellions in Paris and elsewhere on Wednesday added to the feeling of crisis, which again after his last collapse of the government on Monday, when Prime Minister François Bayra lost, again organized France.
7. Groups of protesters who have repeatedly attempted to block the Beltway Paris during the morning rush of the Paris, were scattered by the police using tear gas. Elsewhere in the capital protesters, they accumulated garbage and threw objects on the police. Firefighters were called to fire in a restaurant in the center of Châtelet neighborhood, where thousands of protesters gathered peacefully.
They try to get working people, young students, pensioners – all people in difficulties – carrying all efforts instead of taxing wealth.
8. The afternoon assembly of thousands of people in the center of Paris was peaceful and good humorous, and the labels focused on Macron and its new Prime Minister. “Lecorn, you are not welcome,” read the label mistake a group of graphic design students. Next Reading: “Macron Explosion.”
“One Prime Minister has just been expelled and we will immediately get another from the right,” said student Baptiste Sagot.
One prime minister was just expelled and we will immediately get another from the right.
10. French continuing political instability, marked by minority governments of President Emmanuel Macron, which encountered from one crisis to another, deepened public frustration across the country, informed etc.
Aglawen Vega, a representative of the nurses and trade unions for public hospitals that protested in Paris, said that the anger that caused the movement of the yellow vest has never really disappeared. She noted her determination to prevent French public service from what she considered to be a creeping privatization.
(Tagstotranslate) Protests in Paris