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France gives €100 grants to help drivers cope with rising fuel prices

France on Thursday sought to defuse growing anger about record fuel prices, announcing a price cap on household gas until the end of 2022 and aid for people struggling with petrol price rises.

French Prime Minister Jean Castex announced new measures to help the French cope with petrol and gas prices on TF1's evening news show.
French Prime Minister Jean Castex announced new measures to help the French cope with petrol and gas prices on TF1's evening news show. Photo: Ludovic MARIN / AFP.

Almost three years since the start of “yellow vest” protests that rocked French President Emmanuel Macron’s government, Prime Minister Jean Castex said €100 would be paid to those whose monthly income is less than €2,000 to help them with the increasing cost of petrol -gasoline) and diesel.

This will affect some 38 million people, regardless of whether or not they have a car, he said, and will be automatically sent out automatically starting in December.

He added that the government’s price freeze for household gas, which he announced on September 30th and which was due to run until April 2022, “will be maintained for the whole of 2022”.

READ ALSO Who will get France’s €100 fuel hand-out and how?

Like all countries across the world, France has been hit by a surge in oil and gas prices since the middle of the year caused by a spike in global demand and supply shortages.

But France’s president Emmanuel Macron has particular reason to worry: the violent anti-government protests of 2018 by protesters in florescent yellow safety vests were sparked by anger over rising fuel prices and taxes.

In six months’ time, the 43-year-old head of state is expected to seek a second term – and was hoping to build his campaign around his record on job creation and tax cuts.

“Every time there’s a concern about people’s livelihoods, we’ve responded,” Aurore Berge, the head of Macron’s party in parliament, claimed on Franceinfo radio on Thursday.

Polling shows that the cost of living is the number one concern for French voters – far ahead of issues on immigration that Macron’s far right opponents are focusing on.

“We obviously want to protect French people, above all those people who work hard and are taking the full force of these price rises,” government spokesman Gabriel Attal told journalists on Wednesday.

Last weekend, small protests were held in some rural areas and small towns – the heartland of “yellow vest” discontent – suggesting the first rumblings of dissent over recent rises.

Average diesel prices hit an all-time record last week of €1.5583 a litre, while petrol was at nearly a 10-year high at €1.6567 a litre, slightly below the all-time record reached in April 2012, official data shows.

READ ALSO When and where to get the cheapest fuel in France

The price of diesel has risen 29 percent over the last year – 7 percent just in the last month – while the cheapest unleaded petrol is up 25 percent on the year and 5 percent in the last month, according to the website carbu.com.

For Macron, who remains the favourite for next April’s election, the response to the energy crunch could be vital ahead of an election in which his far-right opponents are already campaigning on immigration, Islam and French identity.

Eight out of 10 households have a vehicle, according to official statistics.

Attal was clear about the threat to the president’s economic record after five years of tax cuts and efforts to raise the purchasing power of French consumers.

“We don’t want the rise in energy prices, particularly petrol, to wipe out these measures,” he said Wednesday. “It’s not the case yet today, but the rises are nibbling away at these efforts.”

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EMMANUEL MACRON

France’s Macron blasts ‘ineffective’ UK Rwanda deportation law

French President Emmanuel Macron on Thursday said Britain's plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda was "ineffective" and showed "cynicism", while praising the two countries' cooperation on defence.

France's Macron blasts 'ineffective' UK Rwanda deportation law

“I don’t believe in the model… which would involve finding third countries on the African continent or elsewhere where we’d send people who arrive on our soil illegally, who don’t come from these countries,” Macron said.

“We’re creating a geopolitics of cynicism which betrays our values and will build new dependencies, and which will prove completely ineffective,” he added in a wide-ranging speech on the future of the European Union at Paris’ Sorbonne University.

British MPs on Tuesday passed a law providing for undocumented asylum seekers to be sent to Rwanda, where their asylum claims would be processed and where they would stay if the claims succeed.

The law is a flagship policy for Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s government, which badly lags the opposition Labour party in the polls with an election expected within months.

Britain pays Paris to support policing of France’s northern coast, aimed at preventing migrants from setting off for perilous crossings in small boats.

Five people, including one child, were killed in an attempted crossing Tuesday, bringing the toll on the route so far this year to 15 – already higher than the 12 deaths in 2023.

But Macron had warm words for London when he praised the two NATO allies’ bilateral military cooperation, which endured through the contentious years of Britain’s departure from the EU.

“The British are deep natural allies (for France) and the treaties that bind us together… lay a solid foundation,” he said.

“We have to follow them up and strengthen them, because Brexit has not affected this relationship,” Macron added.

The president also said France should seek similar “partnerships” with fellow EU members.

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