PARIS (AP) A nationwide strike in France against the government's plan to plug a 20 billion-euro hole in the country's pension system has elicited the equivalent of a Gallic shrug.
The strike called by four unions Tuesday against the Socialist government's proposed reform had almost no impact on traffic across France's rail, bus and subway systems. That is in sharp contrast to the sometimes violent protests that erupted the last time a French government attempted to reform the retirement system.
Several thousand demonstrators marched in Paris and in 180 other towns and cities, but with some moderate unions declining to participate, mobilization withered.
The organizers, including far-left political parties, reject a reform they see as unfair.
"Forty-three years of work for our children, who start working at 25 or 27 years old. They won't retire until they're 68 years old! I really believe it is just unthinkable," said demonstrator Marie-Claude Lecouvreur from Paris.