Protests against Emmanuel Macron

[18][19] The CGT Union has attempted numerous times to organise a large-scale demonstration against Macron with one taking place on 12 September 2017.

[7] Jean-Luc Mélenchon from La France Insoumise has spoken in support of the 12 September protest encouraging members to attend.

[27] Following Prime Minister Édouard Philippe's announcement of the plans for immigration reform, a small protest was led by a group of LGBT activists in Paris holding up a sign reading "Macron starves migrants, queers without borders"[10] A series of protests by wine producers in the South of France have been ongoing since François Hollande's presidency.

[29][30] Pro-Palestinian protesters began to demonstrate against Macron offering Israel Prime Minister Netanyahu a place at the Paris Holocaust Ceremony.

The organizers of the protest were unknown but Le Muslim Post, a religious radioshow promoted the demonstration, encouraging listeners to attend.

[33] Tens of thousands of striking rail workers, public sector staff and students rallied across France against President Emmanuel Macron.

The SNCF and CGT were the major unions in the protests against plans by Macron to remove job-for-life guarantees and pension privileges for new recruits.

[38] Police fired tear gas and deployed 2000 officers to the event and the demonstrators were holding placards reading "Stop Macron!".

[40][41][42] Thousands of protesters marched peacefully in a small group against the legislative bill that will criminalise the publish & circulation of the photograph of police office, which the opponent says would limit the press freedom.

The protest is also organised to show the anger over the footage where a music producer Michel Zecler [fr] a black man, being beaten by three police officers in Paris on 21 November 2020.

Some small group of masked protesters dressed in black, burnt down two cars, a motorcycle and a cafe and smashed the windows of the local shops.

French security forces fired tear gas as the anti right-wing demonstrators marched, before allowing the protests to resume.

[47] A day of strikes and demonstrations took place throughout France against the government's pension reform project, which proposes to raise the retirement age to 64.

Protest against Macron in Paris on 23 September 2017
A gilets jaunes protest in Mont-de-Marsan on 17 November 2018