Macron Defends Job Losses at Whirlpool Factory

The French president said the failure of the takeover at the Whirlpool plant in Amiens was โ€œnot the stateโ€™s fault.โ€

France's President Emmanuel Macron delivers a speech at the Elysee Palace, during a meeting with France's mayors in Paris on Wednesday, Nov. 20.
France's President Emmanuel Macron delivers a speech at the Elysee Palace, during a meeting with France's mayors in Paris on Wednesday, Nov. 20.
AP Photo/Thibault Camus, Pool

PARIS (AP) โ€” A defiant French President Emmanuel Macron has told laid-off employees at a troubled French appliance factory that his government should not be held responsible for job losses after a takeover there failed.

On a two-day visit to his hometown of Amiens, the French leader sought to show that heโ€™s paying more attention to struggling workers, one year after the yellow vest movement erupted against his government policies, which were seen as favoring the rich.

In a blunt moment seized upon by French media, Macron said Friday that the failure of the takeover at the Whirlpool plant in Amiens โ€” a blue-collar battleground with his 2017 far-right election rival Marine Le Pen โ€” was โ€œnot the stateโ€™s fault.โ€

At the time, Macron told workers to trust the company that took over the factory but it later went bust. A second takeover then left more than 100 workers unemployed.

Macron acknowledged a โ€œfailureโ€ but stressed that the government is not responsible for firing workers.

โ€œI believed in it (the project) too,โ€ he said, vowing to keep looking for solutions to help the plantโ€™s former employees.

Leftist lawmaker Francois Ruffin, elected in the Amiensโ€™ region, told reporters that he feels โ€œa huge gap between peoplesโ€™ ordinary lives and the presidentโ€™s comments.โ€

Ruffin said people have concerns because โ€œthey are told they are too old, they canโ€™t find a job, they are constantly looked upon with contempt. And the president is telling them from afar โ€˜Weโ€™re going to take care of this, donโ€™t worry.โ€™โ€

France's unemployment rate has decreased this year to its lowest level in a decade, but at 8.6% it still remains among the highest in the European Union.

Later Friday, Macron spent long moments with the crowd in a popular neighborhood of Amiens, shaking hands and taking selfies with people.

In Amiens, he also visited the university and a facility allowing people to get easier access to public services like the health care system and unemployment benefits.

Macron has been trying to stymie the far-rightโ€™s appeal to blue-collar workers ahead of Franceโ€™s municipal elections in 2020 and the countryโ€™s presidential vote in 2022.

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