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New French labour law attacks workers rights
By Françoise Thull
2 May 2008
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On May 1, the day traditionally dedicated to workers struggles,
a new labour law (Code du Travail) came into force that
fundamentally attacks the rights of French workers.
Officially, the new law is merely a reworking of
previous labour lawi.e., a summary and simplification of
numerous individual laws involving no real change of content.
In reality, the government of President Nicolas Sarkozy has used
this reworking to fundamentally change the relationship
between employers and workers.
French labour laws and rules regulate the relations between
employers and employees and determine all important aspects of
work. The labour code goes back to the nineteenth century and
was developed in its current form in the 1920s. It contains many
regulations resulting from the struggle carried out by workers
over the course of decades. It applies to 16 million private sector
employees, as well as several million workers employed in the
public sector who are paid by private companies. Different work
laws and regulations apply to the public sector.
Several parliamentary deputies have pointed out that the new
labour law completely redefines the relationship between workers
and employers. The previous code was based on a status of dependence,
which protected the weaker party against exploitation and obliged
employers to take responsibility for the welfare of their workforce.
Now, some deputies have warned, this obligation on the part of
the employer has been undermined in the new code.
Alain Vidalies, an economic expert for the French Socialist
Party (PS), said that the aim of the new code was to adapt
the structure and philosophy of the Code du Travail to
the policy of the UMP [the ruling right-wing Union for a Popular
Movement]. Although it [the government] is not allowed to interfere
with the existing law, it has allowed important conditions to
be undermined and questions the unity of the labour law, while
degrading and weakening social guaranties.
In an interview with the CGT (General Confederation of Labour),
Bernard Teyssié, director of the research centre for social
rights at the University of Panthéon Assas, declared: The
result of the reworking has introduced new passages by fragmenting
certain paragraphs, other paragraphs have been shifted in the
text (assuming another meaning and significance), and some paragraphs
redefined in terms of content.
Communist Party delegate Roland Muzeau also warned about the
significance of the changes involved in the labour law in a debate
held in the National Assembly on December 4, 2007. In the same
debate, lawyer and SP deputy Marc Dolez explained: It denies
the unequal character of the relationship between employer and
employee and places them on an equal level, although the Code
du Travail regulates employer-employee relations, which
are inherently unequal and demands that the weaker party be protected.
According to labour expert Gérard Filoche (SP), one
of the few to have publicly opposed the government project, the
new code means that workers can be made fully responsible
and no consideration must be given to their status of dependence.
According to this logic, the worker is theoretically made legally
responsible for all that he does and stands opposed to the employer
as a mere individual, completely isolated from his class.
The new labour law also envisages separating certain
occupations into other sections, which will lead to the abolition
of statutory holidays. In addition, more than 500 paragraphs have
been shifted from the section of the document that is legally
regulated to the section of regulations that lack any such legal
status. This allows the government to modify such sections behind
the backs of the public and without the necessity of a parliamentary
decree.
Another important aspect of the new code concerns special labour
courts (conseils des prudhommes). These are social
courts made up equally of workers and management to negotiate
any conflicts in the private sector. The existence of such courts
is in danger because now a simple decree could rob them of much
of their authority. It makes it increasingly possible for employers
to bypass these courts and apply directly to regional courts,
which are more likely to rule in favour of the employer.
Behind the backs of the public
The French big business lobby Medef has had its eyes on the
labour code for some time. Although former governments, including
so-called leftist administrations, had sought to revise the labour
code, the first systematic attempt was made by Gaullist President
Jacques Chirac and his prime minister, Jean Pierre Raffarin, in
2002. Since then, each succeeding government has continued to
pursue the project.
In 2003, François Fillon, the labour minister at the
time and the current prime minister, appointed a legal commission
to prepare a report on the modernisation of the labour
law in cooperation with business associations and the trade unions.
This project was assigned to Michel de Virville, who made an initial
proposal in 2004.
De Virville is by no means an independent authority when it
comes to such questions. He occupied leading government posts
in the 1980s, and in 1993, joined the executive of the Renault
auto group, where he is now general secretary. He also held the
post of president of the commission for labour relations for Medef
and was a leading member of the industrial association UIMM, which
has been hit by a corruption scandal. On January 31, 2008, he
took over as head of the unemployment insurance group Unedic,
but on March 1 resigned from these posts due to the unfolding
UIMM corruption affair.
Based on the report by de Virvilles, the reform of the labour
code was quickly undertakenin part by the government of
Dominique de Villepin via decrees on regulations. Such government
regulations have to be confirmed by parliament but, unlike laws,
do not require a debate.
It was assumed that the new code would come into force in June
2006, but its introduction was stymied by the mass protest movement
against the First Job Contract (CPE). On January 21, 2008, the
National Assembly ratified the legally regulated part of the new
labour code. Since then, labour minister Xavier Bertrand has also
issued regulations of implementation, meaning the law came fully
into effect on May 1.
The media has largely failed to comment on the revised version
of the labour code, although it also affects the status of around
30,000 journalists. The official left organisations in France
have also refrained from taking up the issue, although important
preparations for the implementation of the new code were made
just a few weeks before last years presidential election.
The trade union bureaucracy has consciously and secretively
backed the changes to the Code du Travail, although the
past period has witnessed a series of major labour disputes.
With reference to Herve Lanouzière, a member of the
reform commission of the Ministry Labour, the web
site revuefiduciaire reports that the trade unions were
deeply involved in the process of elaborating the revised code.
All of the major trade unions federations were involved in the
reform commission, sending two members each.
Revuefiduciaire reports: Sixteen meetings took
place. Both sides (employers and trade unions) had full and unrestricted
access to all of the work. There was an active exchange of letters,
and according to Lanouzière, over 80 percent of their objections
were taken into consideration.
See Also:
France: CGT union betrays port workers'
strike
[1 May 2008]
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