Current:Home > MarketsFrance’s new prime minister vows to defend farmers and restore authority in schools -Secure Growth Solutions
France’s new prime minister vows to defend farmers and restore authority in schools
View
Date:2025-04-19 19:25:08
PARIS (AP) — France’s new Prime Minister Gabriel Attal vowed Tuesday to boost employment, restore authority in the country’s schools and support workers including farmers who have been protesting for days over their eroding incomes.
Three weeks after he was appointed by President Emmanuel Macron as France’s youngest-ever and first openly gay prime minister, Attal sought to meet people’s top concerns in a lively policy address to French lawmakers filled with announcements and promises. The speech alternatively drew applause from his supporters and noisy boos from the opposition benches.
“My priority is to boost employment,” he told the National Assembly, France’s lower house of parliament. Attal vowed to take action so that “work pays more” than “inactivity.”
“It’s nonsense that the unemployment rate remains at around 7% at a time when so many sectors are looking to hire throughout the country,” he said.
Attal, 34, said his government will take measures to encourage employers to better pay workers who earn the minimum salary. He promised tax cuts on middle-class households.
He also announced that jobless people who get a state-sponsored “solidarity income” will all be required to spend 15 hours per week in “activities” like job training or an internship, starting from next year.
“Nobody is asking for the right to be lazy in our country,” he said.
Attal expressed support for angry farmers, promising emergency cash aid and controls on imported food, in hopes that the moves will cool a protest movement that has seen tractors shut down highways across France and inspired similar actions around Europe.
The prime minister, who was previously education minister, made a point of detailing measures to restore authority at school.
He confirmed a plan to experiment with uniforms in some public schools as part of efforts to move the focus away from clothes and reduce school bullying and vowed to diminish the time children spend on screens.
He also announced the creation of a new “sentence of community service” for children under 16 who need to be sanctioned. “We need to get back to a clear principle: You break, you fix. You make it dirty, you clean. You defy authority, you learn to respect it,” he said.
Another measure for children who disobey rules is to offer parents to send them to a boarding school, with state financial and other support, he said.
Attal promised to “de-bureaucratize France” — or diminish the volume of red tape — to respond to criticism of farmers, employers and local officials about excessive bureaucracy.
To support the country’s struggling health care system, he said he will appoint a special envoy to “go abroad to find doctors who would be willing to come to France.” He also said his government will find a system to make patients pay if they take a medical appointment and don’t attend it, a measure much expected by doctors.
Urging the state to be “exemplary,” he asked his administration to experiment with a four-day week, in which employees who want to arrive earlier in the morning and leave later in the evening can get one additional day off every week, while working the same amount of time as others.
He also asked for working hours of cleaning people in administration offices to be scheduled at day time, not at night.
“To be French in 2024 is to live in a country” fighting for “stability, justice and peace,” he concluded.
“To be French in 2024 means being able to be prime minister while being openly gay” in a country that, 10 years ago, was divided over same-sex marriage, Attal added in reference to months of nationwide protests and wrenching debate before the law was adopted. “I see it as showing our country is moving forward.”
veryGood! (527)
Related
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- Many in Niger are suffering under coup-related sanctions. Junta backers call it a worthy sacrifice
- I had two very different abortions. There's no one-size policy for reproductive health.
- Most of Justice Thomas’ $267,000 loan for an RV seems to have been forgiven, Senate Democrats say
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- The rise of the four-day school week
- Florida’s private passenger train service plans to add stop between South Florida and Orlando
- I had two very different abortions. There's no one-size policy for reproductive health.
- At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
- Medical exceptions to abortion bans often exclude mental health conditions
Ranking
- 'Squid Game' without subtitles? Duolingo, Netflix encourage fans to learn Korean
- Prep star Flagg shifts focus to home state Maine after mass shooting, says college decision can wait
- A match made in fandom: Travis, Taylor and the weirdness of celebrity relationships
- Venezuela’s attorney general opens investigation against opposition presidential primary organizers
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- Sam Bankman-Fried awaits chance to tell his side of story in epic cryptocurrency exchange collapse
- After backlash, Scholastic says it will stop separating diverse books at school book fairs
- Microsoft up, Alphabet down. S&P 500, Nasdaq drop as tech companies report mixed earnings
Recommendation
Could your smelly farts help science?
Poland’s president calls for new parliament to hold first session Nov. 13
Richard Roundtree, Shaft actor, dies at age 81
Is Victor Wembanyama NBA's next big thing? How his stats stack up with the league's best
Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
Scientists discover hidden landscape frozen in time under Antarctic ice for millions of years
NY natural history museum changing how it looks after thousands of human remains in collection
Abortions in US rose slightly after post-Roe restrictions were put in place, new study finds