PARIS: French President Emmanuel Macron (pix) appeared defiant on Tuesday after his government narrowly survived no-confidence votes over an increase in the retirement age, but called for calm as furious protesters kept up the pressure on the streets.

Ignoring calls from opponents, Macron said there would be no government reshuffle, no fresh parliamentary elections and no referendum on his controversial pension reform, even in the face of widespread protests that have brought millions into the streets.

“We are facing a moment in which we must appease, calm, go on the ground and listen to people’s anger,“ he told a meeting of political allies, according to participants.

Nevertheless, as thousands gathered in central Paris and other French cities for another night of protests, Macron said “riots do not prevail over the representatives of the people.”

Police fired teargas at the Paris protesters, who threw projectiles at them, and made more arrests, after over 200 were detained on Monday night.

The latest anger was fueled by the government's decision to invoke a notorious constitutional power to force the pensions reform through the National Assembly without a vote last week.

Macron's centrist government narrowly survived two no-confidence motions in parliament on Monday, clearing the way for the legislation raising the retirement age from 62 to 64 to enter into force.

“The reform is adopted but it is not seen as legitimate in the eyes of French people,“ political scientist Jerome Jaffre told France Inter radio on Tuesday.

“That’s a source of problems, of bitterness, and it’s far from being resolved.”

There were also clashes in eastern cities Dijon and Strasbourg overnight, while protesters blocked traffic in other parts of the country.

- Arbitrary arrests? -

Far-right leader Marine Le Pen warned Macron on Tuesday that he was pushing the country to the verge of a “social explosion”.

“Consciously the government is creating all the conditions for a social explosion, as if they were looking for that,“ Le Pen told AFP in an interview, adding that she would not help “extinguish the fire” of public anger over the legislation.

Lawyers, magistrates and some politicians accused police officers of having made arbitrary arrests in an attempt to stifle anti-government protests.

They cited as proof the fact that the vast majority of detained demonstrators were released after a few hours, without any charges.

“Criminal law is being used by the government to deter demonstrators from exercising their right to demonstrate,“ said Raphael Kempf, a lawyer specialising in human rights and freedoms.

Paris police chief Laurent Nunez rejected the allegations, telling the BFMTV broadcaster: “There are no unjustified arrests”.

Macron's office said the president would give a live television interview at 1:00 pm (1200 GMT) on Wednesday.

He is expected to defend what was to be a flagship reform, while seeking fresh momentum for the four years remaining of his second term.

At Tuesday’s meeting with political allies at the presidential palace, Macron called for fresh ideas in the “next two to three weeks” with a view to adopting “a change in method and a new reform agenda”, according to a participant who spoke to AFP on condition of anonymity.

- 'Necessary transformations' -

Under-fire Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne has refused to resign, telling AFP that she was “determined to continue to carry out the necessary transformations in our country with my ministers”.

As well as the political crisis sparked by the law, the government is also contending with growing public order problems and the risk of economic disruption.

Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said there had been 1,200 unauthorised demonstrations since last Thursday, “some of them violent”.

Meanwhile strikes and blockades at oil refineries could create fuel shortages.

Around six percent of petrol stations throughout France have run out of petrol or diesel, or both.

“I’ve been to most stations,“ 18-year-old high school student Christos Chatts told AFP in the southern port city of Marseille. “They’re either closed, or there’s no fuel, or there are monster queues.”

The streets of Paris also remain strewn with uncollected rubbish after a two-week strike by garbage workers.

Another round of strikes and protests organised by trade unions for Thursday could again bring public transport to a standstill.

A survey on Sunday showed Macron’s personal approval rating at just 28 percent, its lowest level since the height of the anti-government “Yellow Vest” protest movement in 2019. -AFP

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