French Farmers' Protests Intensify, Edge Closer to Paris
New Prime Minister Gabriel Attal Faces First Major Challenge as Farmers Demand Urgent Action
- French farmers have been protesting for two weeks against low farmgate prices, green regulation, and free-trade policies, blocking highways and dumping imported produce.
- The protests, which started in the southwest, have moved closer to Paris, posing a significant challenge for new Prime Minister Gabriel Attal.
- The farmers' union has handed the government a list of demands, including better enforcement of a law designed to safeguard farmgate prices, continued diesel tax-breaks for agricultural vehicles, immediate payment of EU agricultural subsidies, and immediate aid for winemakers and organic farmers.
- Farmers have expressed frustration at increasingly complex environmental standards, red tape, low incomes, rising costs, and a lack of public support.
- The protests have made for a rare alliance between rival farmers' unions, with left-wing Confédération Paysanne joining the heavyweight FNSEA and Coordination Rurale.
























