French Farmers Protest Stagnant Revenues, Unfair Competition

The protest was snarling traffic in the Paris area, as farmers from across the country attempted to use 1,000 tractors to block off access to Paris.

Farmer drive their tractors on the Paris ring road in Paris on Wednesday, Nov. 27. French farmers are driving tractors into Paris and Lyon to protest stagnant revenues and unfair competition. The placard reads « Save your farmer ».
Farmer drive their tractors on the Paris ring road in Paris on Wednesday, Nov. 27. French farmers are driving tractors into Paris and Lyon to protest stagnant revenues and unfair competition. The placard reads « Save your farmer ».
AP Photo/Thibault Camus

PARIS (AP) — Rumbling two by two down the ring road, disgruntled French farmers drove their tractors toward Paris Wednesday to protest stagnant revenues and what they say is unfair competition.

The protest was snarling traffic in the Paris area, as farmers from across the country attempted to use 1,000 tractors to block off access to Paris.

The tractors will remain parked on the highway circling the city until French President Emmanuel Macron agrees to meet with protesters, regional farmers’ union spokesperson Elisa Despiney told The Associated Press.

They could remain there for “hours, or maybe days,” she added.

By mid-morning, blue and green tractors bearing signs reading “Respond, Macron!” had advanced toward the southwestern edge of the city, taking up two lanes of the highway as police escorted them on motorcycles. They then stalled on the Paris ring road, where some protesters have pitched tents and lit fires.

Protesters on foot inside the city, meanwhile, have blocked off the Champs-Elysees and scattered hay across the famous Paris avenue.

The French presidency said no meeting between Macron and a delegation of farmers was planned at this stage.

Farmers’ grievances include free trade agreements they say put them at a disadvantage, a government reform that failed to increase their revenues, and regulations they say hinder the sector’s performance.

Damien Greffin, president of the farmers’ union for the Paris region, placed the blame for farmers’ woes squarely on Macron, whom he called the “instrument of these divisions” in an interview with BFM TV. He called on Macron to rally French citizens to support agricultural workers.

Farmers have specifically criticized a law passed last year that intended to bolster French agriculture. They say they haven’t seen the increased revenues the government promised.

They have also condemned “agri-bashing,” or perceived public hostility toward farmers, particularly from those who have criticized their use of pesticides and treatment of animals.

“We’d just like to work without people constantly pointing their finger at us about the plant protection products we use, about animal welfare,” Antoine Benoist, a 44-year-old farmer from the Essonne region, told the AP.

“We are the first to be careful with our future, to think about our health, the health of our children, about animal welfare,” he added.

Minister of food and agriculture Didier Guillaume told Europe 1 radio Wednesday that he supports “their anger and their protest.”

He added that “enough is enough” of “permanent denigration” and the gulf between city residents and farmers.

Guillaume defended last year’s agriculture law, saying that a two-year experimentation phase is still underway and it will take time for farmers to see its benefits.

The main farmers’ union has organized actions throughout the country, including a similar tractor protest in Lyon, where about 600 farmers with some 120 tractors blockaded three entrances to the city.

Paris and Lyon police have advised car drivers to stay off the affected roads.

The demonstrations in France follow similar protests in Germany Tuesday, when some 10,000 farmers drove 5,000 tractors into Berlin to protest the German government’s agricultural policies. Farmers in the Netherlands clogged highways last month to decry what they said was unfair blame for nitrogen pollution in the country.

The new EU Commission president on Wednesday guaranteed that farming would continue to be at the heart of the bloc.

Ursula von der Leyen told the EU plenary in Strasbourg that agriculture, which long absorbed half the EU budget before slowly tapering off, “will remain a valued part of our culture and our future.

In her speech hours before she was slated to be confirmed by the parliament, she promised “capital access to young farmers” to beef up their income, and insisted she would act against unfair global competition which the European farmers increasingly fear will undercut domestic prices. She said that EU trading partners “must comply with the EU environmental standards” if they want to import farm products.

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