The Guardian

King Charles trip to France postponed

First state visit as monarch would have clashed with strikes and social unrest, says French president

Kim Willsher

Emmanuel Macron has defended the last-minute postponement of King Charles’s state visit to France next week, saying it would not have been “serious or good sense” for it to go ahead as it clashed with another national day of mass strikes and social unrest.

The king had been scheduled to arrive in France tomorrow on his first state visit as monarch. He was due to visit Paris and Bordeaux before heading to Germany on Wednesday.

Asked if the cancellation was humiliating for France, the French president replied: “What would have been detestable for the British people, as well as for ourselves would have been to maintain it with [possible] incidents in the process.”

In a statement earlier, the Élysée Palace said the decision to postpone the visit had been taken by the French and British governments following a telephone conversation between Macron and Charles yesterday morning after mass protests against the French government the previous day.

“From the moment last night when the unions announced a new day of mobilisation on Tuesday and the king’s visit was scheduled for Monday to Wednesday, I think it would not be serious and would lack a certain common sense to propose to his majesty the king and queen consort to come on a state visit in the midst of demonstrations,” Macron said.

“As we have much friendship, respect and esteem for his majesty the king and queen consort and the British people, I took the initiative to call and tell him the situation and the announcement of a new day of action and good sense and friendship led us to propose a postponement.”

He added: “When calm returns perhaps at the beginning depending on our diaries we can schedule a new state visit and we can welcome the new king and queen consort in conditions that will allow them to enjoy Paris as well as Bordeaux.”

In a statement, Buckingham Palace said: “The king and the queen consort’s state visit to France has been postponed. Their majesties greatly look forward to the opportunity to visit France as soon as dates can be found.”

Protests continued yesterday after mass demonstrations on Thursday. A further day of action was planned for next Tuesday during what would have been the royal visit.

The Élysée statement said it hoped to welcome the king “in conditions that correspond our friendly relations” and that the visit would be rescheduled “as soon as possible”.

More than 450 protesters were arrested on Thursday as about 300 demonstrations drew more than a million people nationwide to protest against unpopular pension changes that would raise the retirement age from 62 to 64. Unions said more than 3 million people took to the streets to demonstrate against a fiercely contested law that was pushed through parliament without a vote last week.

The president and his wife, Brigitte, had been due to host a banquet for Charles and Camilla, the queen consort, at the former royal palace at Versailles, which critics viewed as having echoes of Marie Antoinette feasting while Paris revolted.

Fabien Villedieu, of the Sud-Rail union, had called on protesters to demonstrate at Versailles. “We have two kings today; one in England and one in France. Let’s all go to Versailles and give them a proper welcome,” Villedieu told BFM TV. Olivier Besancenot, of the New Anticapitalist party, had said: “We’ll welcome Charles III with a good old general strike.”

On Thursday, Jean-Luc Mélenchon of the radical left La France Insoumise (LFI) told French television the king was welcome in France but “it is not the right time”. Raquel Garrido, an LFI MP added: “Two kings were due to meet at Versailles. One down. One to go.” Macron used executive powers to push through his pension changes.

After their arrival at Orly airport for the three-day visit on Sunday, and a welcome by the French prime minister, Élisabeth Borne, the programme included a ceremony under the Arc de Triomphe and a visit to the Musée d’Orsay. Charles was due to give a speech at the Sénat, the upper house of the French parliament.

The royal couple were to travel by train to Bordeaux on Tuesday to witness the devastation caused by summer’s wildfires, before marking the opening of the British consulate there and visiting an organic vineyard.

Front Page

en-gb

2023-03-25T07:00:00.0000000Z

2023-03-25T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://guardian.pressreader.com/article/281590949814363

Guardian/Observer