Current:Home > ScamsFrance’s new prime minister vows to defend farmers and restore authority in schools -CapitalCourse
France’s new prime minister vows to defend farmers and restore authority in schools
View
Date:2025-04-16 12:28:06
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! (2)
Related
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Alex De Minaur pulls out of Wimbledon quarterfinal match vs. Novak Djokovic
- Giants on 'Hard Knocks': Inside combine interviews, teeing up Saquon Barkley exit
- Joey King reunites with 'White House Down' co-star Channing Tatum on 'The Tonight Show'
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- Horoscopes Today, July 9, 2024
- Meagan Good Reveals Every Friend Was Against Jonathan Majors Romance Amid Domestic Abuse Trial
- Sifan Hassan to run the 1500m, 5000m, 10,000m and marathon at the Paris Olympics
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Taylor Swift Eras Tour: Sign language interpreters perform during Madrid show
Ranking
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- Albertsons, Kroger release list of stores to be sold in merger. See the full list
- Is Mercury in retrograde right now? Here's what the planetary shift means for you.
- US women's gymnastics teams will sparkle at Paris Olympics
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- Save Big on the Cutest Kate Spade Bags You'll Wear Every Day, Including $71 Crossbodies in so Many Colors
- Firefighting plane crashes in Montana reservoir, divers searching for pilot
- Police find missing Chicago woman's cell phone, journal in Bahamian waters
Recommendation
At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
Kevin Costner’s second ‘Horizon’ film pulled from theatrical release
Meghan Trainor Reveals “Knees to Knees” Toilet Set Up in Her and Daryl Sabara’s New House
Congress OKs bill overhauling oversight of troubled federal Bureau of Prisons
Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
Score 50% Off Le Creuset, 70% Off Madewell, $1 Tarte Concealer, 70% Off H&M, 65% Off Kate Spade, & More
Ariana Grande Claps Back at Haters Over Her Voice Change
'Longlegs' will haunt your nightmares and 'hijack your subconscious,' critics say