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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: France
France: Students need a socialist perspective and a turn to
the working class
By the editorial board
7 January 2008
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the author
Despite months of blockades and confrontations with police,
the movement calling for abrogation of the Pécresse law
reforming French universities is at an impasse. The law is still
in place and, before the beginning of the Christmas holidays,
most of the student blockades had ended or been forcibly repressed.
The essential question facing students opposed to the law is:
On what political basis can a struggle against the law continue?
The law, adopted by the French parliament during the August
holidays, allows universities more autonomy to manage their assets
and budgets, recruit staff and design courses, create partnerships
with business and look for additional funding from private corporations.
It gives university presidents control of hiring decisions and
greater power over the budget. It allows greater private investment
in state universities, subordinating them directly to business
interests.
Student strikes hit roughly half of French universities during
October and November, as railwaymen also mounted powerful strikes
against government-planned pension cuts. Students occupied university
buildings and offices to prevent classes from being held; protests
and blockades s pread quickly. More than 50 of the 85 universities
in France held mass meetings; about 30 voted for abrogation of
the law.
The largest student union, the Union Nationale des Etudiants
de France (UNEF), intervened only to keep protesting students
under control. Closely linked to the Socialist Party (PS), UNEF
had already abandoned opposition to the law in July when it received
guarantees from President Nicolas Sarkozy that no
selection process for masters students was being considered. While
the UNEF continued talking to the government to get more money
for higher education, the student general assemblies (AGs) elected
delegates to a National Student Coordinating Committee and refused
any negotiations with the government.
The National Student Coordinating Committeelargely influenced
by the militant trade union SUD-étudiant, the far
left Ligue Communiste Révolutionnaire (LCR), and
anarchist groupsheld a series of weekly meetings in different
universities, calling for the abrogation of the law.
There was widespread sympathy among students for the railwaymen.
However, without organisation and mass support inside the workers
and students movements, it mainly took the form of isolated
attempts to mount blockades of train stations, which were quickly
assaulted and disbanded by police. This failure to link students
and workers struggles arose directly from the political
perspectives of the movements leaderships.
The trade unions, which were busy trying to limit the rail
workers to a few isolated one-day strikes while working out a
negotiated accord with the government, totally opposed uniting
the workers and students struggles. They gave no aid
to students trying to blockade train stations. Force Ouvrière
head Jean-Claude Mailly gave a November 12 television interview,
sayin g, I dont think that blockading, as some have
announced, the stations tomorrow, would be a good idea.
CGT-Rail chief Didier Le Reste opposed station blockades, citing
the risk of security excesses. Also on November 12,
UNEF president Bruno Julliard said that the UNEF did not
support railway blockades.
The defeat of the railway strikes in mid-November then allowed
the government to turn on and defeat the student blockades.
The government had been unwilling to use force against students
while facing a serious threat of shutdown of the rail and transport
sector of the economy. As the strikes ended, police began openly
confronting student blockaders, amid a media-driven security hysteria
whipped up during the repression of riots in Villiers-le-Bel,
after the November 25 deaths of two youths in a vehicle collision
with police. CRS riot squads and police progressively expelled
block ading students in campuses in Paris, Grenoble, Nantes, Lyon,
Montpellier, Rouen, Rennes, Amiens and other cities.
The UNEF leadership withdrew their limited support for strike
action against the law after the defeat of the rail strike. After
receiving minimal concessions in talks with Higher Education Minister
Valérie Pécresse, Julliard announced on November
27 important advances and called on the AGs to take
those into account. There were new guarantees
and safeguards on student fears, he said. Two days later,
Julliard called for the blockades to be lifted and the strike
suspended due to the advances obtained for the students.
The National Student Coordinating Committee, which had never
seriously prepared for a political fight with the government,
became further disoriented. After its November 24-25 meeting in
Lille, it issued a resolution stating: It is possible to
win and make the government retreat on our demands.... Sarkozy
can try as he much as he likes to say he wont retreat in
the face of us, he and his government have been weakened by the
strikes.... The rail workers in particular showed that fighting
Sarkozy and his policy was possible.
In fact, as events would show, the railway defeat freed the
state to deal with the students. Workers and students could fight,
but without a political campaign to win over the entire population,
they could not win. This lack of political perspective was combined
with a drastic overestimation of the governments economic
and political room for concessions to students.
The government must carry out its reforms, due to massive changes
shaking global capitalism and affecting Europes place within
it. France has been facing a slowdown in GDP growth for more than
a decade, amid the rapid rise of highly competitive, cheap-labour
manufacturing economies such as China and India. The French bourgeoisies
preferred strategy to compete in this new environment is to move
its economy into high-technology sectors.
A document published by the Prime Ministers Economic
Analysis Council (CAE), titled Globalisation: Frances
Strengths, states: 42 percent of French exports are
in high-tech. Over two-thirds of these are in the aeronautics
sector alone. In the case of China, the [high-tech] sector represents
only 13 percent of export sales. This is important, because it
constitutes a barrier against competition from low-wage countries....
France does not have a choice:... she must place herself in the
high-tech sector to see Chinese competition fade away.
France is still behind, however, in the development of high-tech
products. For instance, in 2004, French expenditure on R&D
was 2.16 percent of gross domestic product (GDP), lower than Germany
(2.49 percent) and Sweden (3.74 percent). The number of patents
per million inhabitants in 2003 was 40.9 in France, 90.5 in Germany,
and 91.2 in Sweden.
French capitalism wants to press the universities into service,
to make up for this weakness of private industry. The CAE report
stresses the need to build centres of competitivenessjoint
ventures between state research institutes, universities, and
private companies. It gives as an example Medicen, a Paris-area
medical research cluster regrouping [companies] Gsk, Ipsen,
Philips-Fr, Pierre Fabre, Sanofi Aventis, Servier, Siemens, [state
research institutes] CEA, CNRS, INRIA, INSERM, the Pasteur, Curie,
and Roussy Institutes, and the universities of Paris 5, 6, 7,
and Paris-South, the Central [engineering] School, ENS, and ESPCI.
These projected changes give an objective basis for the unity
of the students and workers struggles, as they necessitate
both a massive reorganisation of French universities and determined
attacks on the living standards of workers.
Emphasis on university autonomy will lead to inequality
between universities, as only the universities to be considered
as research centres for private industry will be funded, and rural
or smaller-town universities to be left to rot. Moreover, subjects
not immediately profitable to private companies will be increasingly
starved for funding.
Forcing universities to rely on private funding will inevitably
threaten working-class students, with the possibility of introducing
large tuition fees as in the US. There, students take out loans
to pay for their studies, often leaving school with unmanageable
levels of debt, in the tens of thousands of dollars.
The growth of high-tech industry on a capitalist basis is,
moreover, impossible without an attack on the social conditions
of the working class. For instance, for French biotech firms to
attract investment and compete internationally, they will need
to increase fees for drugs and medical treatment to levels like
those in the US and UK, where they are dramatically higher. It
will also require the development of a larger class of wealthy
investorsi.e., a transfer of social resources away from
workers and an increase in social inequality; the CAE report states:
[France has] too few venture capitalists or business
angels (600 in France versus almost 60,000 in the UK).
To advance their struggles, French students must turn to the
working class. In opposition to the profit-driven plans of the
ruling class targeting the universities, students and workers
must advance a perspective of the planned, democratic use of international
resources to satisfy social needs. Such a perspective depends
on a revival of the heritage of revolutionary Marxism internationally,
and it is on this basis that we call for building of a section
of the International Students for Social Equality (ISSE) and of
the International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI)
in France.
See Also:
French student mobilisation
at an impasse
[3 December 2007]
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