Paris is bracing for a storm that feels less like protest and more like revolt. When teachers walk out, trains stall, pharmacies lock their doors, and teenagers drag desks across the gates of their schools, the government hears sirens. This is the sound of a society rejecting austerity before the first line of the budget hits paper. Emmanuel Macron’s brand-new prime minister, Sebastien Lecornu, hasn’t even unveiled the plan, yet France is already on fire. 800,000 people poured into the streets, a sea of rage met by 80,000 police. The state bets on control, the people bet on numbers.
Unions that usually spar with each other closed ranks. Teachers, train operators, nurses, pharmacists, they moved as one. That unity gives the strikes power beyond wages or pensions. It defends a system that once promised stability and now feels stripped away. In Lyon and Marseille, tear gas drifted through cobblestone streets, proof of a government struggling to hold grip.
🇫🇷 FRANCE ERUPTS: STRIKES, BLOCKADES, AND BUDGET FURY
Teachers, train drivers, pharmacists, and hospital staff walked off the job as teenagers blocked high schools in mass protests against looming austerity.
Unions demand scrapping budget cuts, reversing the pension age hike,… https://t.co/B3UAfXswOK pic.twitter.com/FaELNLK1ec
— Mario Nawfal (@MarioNawfal) September 18, 2025
🇫🇷 FRANCE GRINDS TO A HALT: 800K HIT THE STREETS
Nearly 800,000 workers – from teachers to train operators – just reminded Paris who keeps the lights on.
Schools shuttered, trains stalled, hospitals stretched thin: this was a nationwide timeout for Macron’s budget-cut agenda.… https://t.co/P2Byojfx69 pic.twitter.com/XdioYQhNLX
— Mario Nawfal (@MarioNawfal) September 18, 2025
“Hundreds of thousands of protesters poured into the streets across France on Thursday, piling pressure on President Emmanuel Macron and his newly appointed prime minister to abandon any austerity measures aimed at repairing the country’s depleted public finances.
A day of mostly peaceful protests turned violent as night fell and protesters clashed with police in Place de la Nation in Paris. Protesters hurled projectiles at columns of police. Officers clad in riot gear released tear gas before charging at crowds that refused to disperse.”