#cfdts
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
sissa-arrows · 1 year ago
Text
Petit message pour les Français… vous êtes probablement syndiqués du coup ce serai cool d’éviter la CFDT et si vous y êtes déjà faites leur part de votre mécontentement.
Suite à l’assassinat par “Israël” des 3 agents Palestiniens qui travaillaient pour le Quai d’Orsay, le Ministère des affaires étrangères refusent de leur rendre hommage. Les syndicats ont décidé de prendre les choses en main et d’organiser un hommage malgré tout le 27 février. Tout les syndicats soutiennent la démarche SAUF la CFDT.
Parce que bon des syndicats qui refusent de se positionner contre un genocide y’en a beaucoup trop et c’est clairement pas eux qui vont nous aider quand on sera dans la galère alors financez les bons syndicats.
Edit: En syndicat qui est assez important pour avoir du poids et qui a des bonnes bases concernant la Palestine (même si c’est pas parfait) y’a Solidaires.
34 notes · View notes
coochiequeens · 1 year ago
Text
A man who wore prosthetic breasts and was asked to "tone down" his make up is crying victim because his boss called him his by legal name before he started the legal process to change his sex.
By Amy Hamm July 1, 2024
A trans-identified male in the Maine-et-Loire region of France has been awarded €7,000 in compensation after a court determined he was the victim of “gender discrimination” by his former employer.
Syntia Dersoir, 22, had filed a complaint against the McDonald’s franchise where he worked after management referred to him by his legal, male name and asked him to remove the makeup he wore during his shift.
Dersoir began working at a McDonald’s located in Segré-en-Anjou Bleu beginning from September 2022. He was hired under his birth name and was legally registered as a male at the time. In early 2023, he began wearing makeup and prosthetic breasts to work, and, by the spring of 2023, he obtained an alteration of his identification documents.
Dersoir alleged that the discrimination happened over several weeks in 2023 after he began wearing his prosthetic breasts and makeup to work. Management at the McDonald’s branch where Dersoir was employed continued to refer to him by the name he had been hired under, his male name, despite his requests to be called by his feminine preferred name.
The man also alleged that management instructed other staff to also refer to him by his male name.
According to his legal complaint, Dersoir detailed that during one shift, when he was wearing lipstick, a manager asked him to leave or to go to a nearby store and purchase makeup remover. In March of 2023, Dersoir obtained a note from his doctor allowing him to take sick-leave, citing the stress he was suffering from the discrimination he had been subjected to.
Dersoir complained to the French Labour Inspectorate, and was provided a lawyer by the French Democratic Confederation of Labour (CFDT), a conglomorate of national labour unions. He also filed a criminal complaint against the management at the McDonald’s where he had been working.
In response to Dersoir’s allegations, the lawyer representing McDonald’s, Maître Pascal Landais, claimed that management had only ever asked Dersoir to follow the workplace makeup policy that applied to all staff.
“We asked him to tone down his make-up, not to remove it,” she clarified. The McDonald’s policy described that all employees should wear “light and discreet makeup” only for both uniform and hygiene purposes.
French media has run sympathetic stories on Dersoir, profiling him as a victim of discrimination. Some outlets are criticizing the managers at the fast-food chain, which uses the slogan “come as you are” in the country. One outlet suggested that Dersoir’s bosses had “trampled on” the sentiment behind the slogan and are “guilty of moral harassment and discrimination.” 
On June 24, the employment tribunal of Angers ruled in Dersoir’s favor, ordering the franchise to pay him €7,000 in compensation. Dersoir’s lawyer was excited about the verdict, noting that it set a precedent and that other “victims” may now be able to come forward.
“As soon as a large brand is convicted … it necessarily provokes a discussion. This is a first to condemn McDonald’s, which presents itself from the angle of tolerance, for precisely the opposite,” the lawyer said.
Charlotte Duval, the Deputy Secretary General of the Maine-et-Loire Services Union, similarly praised the decision, stating: “This ruling is very positive … it is the recognition of [Dersoir’s] victimization. It may also open the door to other people who are experiencing this kind of situation to talk about it.”
Dersoir is in fact the second trans-identified male in Europe to take legal action against a local McDonald’s for “gender discrimination,” with the other incident occurring in Germany.
One day after Dersoir won his case, a trans-identified male in Berlin appeared at the Berlin Labor Court after filing a case against the Central Station franchise where he had been employed.
Kylie Divon, 27, is seeking compensation for “gender identity discrimination” after being denied access to the changing room reserved for female employees.
5 notes · View notes
leschauffeurssolidaires · 5 months ago
Text
La CFDT et le droit à la déconnexion !
La CFDT peut intervenir de plusieurs manières en cas de non-respect du droit à la déconnexion : 1. Information et sensibilisation Informer les salariés : La CFDT peut organiser des réunions ou distribuer des documents pour sensibiliser les salariés à leurs droits, notamment en matière de respect du temps de repos et du droit à la déconnexion. Former les représentants syndicaux : Ces derniers…
0 notes
secteurcgtstrasbourg · 1 year ago
Text
DÉCLARATION INTERSYNDICALE DU 1ER JUILLET 2024
Tumblr media
Battre l’extrême droite et gagner le progrès social ! L’extrême droite est arrivée en tête des suffrages lors du premier tour des élections législatives. Ce résultat est une alerte inquiétante. Mais rien n’est joué. Les organisations syndicales CFDT, CGT, UNSA, FSU et Solidaires appellent à un sursaut démocratique, social et républicain dans les urnes dimanche 7 juillet. https://www.cgt.fr/comm-de-presse/battre-lextreme-droite-et-gagner-le-progres-social
1 note · View note
sebiblr · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
0 notes
zeboute · 1 year ago
Text
Louise et Denise Boute, une histoire de syndicalisme et d'égalité des hommes, et femmes.
Le monde de l’entreprise est un monde où l’on cherche bienveillance, solidarité, entre-aide. Le bien vivre ensemble ! Respecter chacun, dans sa diversité. Hommes et Femmes, personnes d’origine étrangères, homosexuels, handicapés… La longue histoire de ma famille s’est ancrée dans ces valeurs de solidarité. Madeleine Singer, historienne de la CFDT, retrace ici son histoire. Louis Boute et…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
le-journal-catalan · 2 years ago
Text
F3C CFDT communique : stop à l'hécatombe de journalistes palestiniensLa CFDT communique :
La Fédération Communication Conseil Culture F3C CFDT nous communique avec prière d’insérer : “La bande de Gaza subit un black-out médiatique extrêmement grave. En deux mois de conflit, plus de soixante journalistes ont été tués et les journalistes internationaux sont empêchés de s’y rendre ou d’en sortir. L’État d’Israël doit cesser de cibler les journalistes, ainsi que leurs médias. Nous…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
kvetchlandia · 1 month ago
Text
Tumblr media
Uncredited Associated Press Photographer Mass Union Demonstration, Place de la Republique, Paris May, 1968
May 6 marked the 57th anniversary of the beginning of the May Days demonstrations in France. The demonstrations began among university students in Paris and quickly spread to other campuses throughout France. Within a couple of days, workers in factories surrounding Paris began striking and occupying their workplaces in solidarity with the students and in order to achieve their own demands. Very quickly, the unions and the students saw their unity and began having joint solidarity marches and demonstrations. On May 11, the CGT, France's largest confederation of unions, along with the smaller CFDT, France's second largest confederation of unions, called for a general strike. Millions of workers walked off the job in France's largest ever general strike, joining millions of students who were in the streets, boycotting classes. Together, these joint actions of workers and students brought France to the edge of social revolution. DeGaulle, then the president of France, actually fled briefly to a French military base in what was then West Germany, fearing the possibility of revolution. Unfortunately, the demonstrations ran out of steam by June and obviously, there was no revolution.
23 notes · View notes
dfjlamignoe760900 · 19 days ago
Text
ptdr le seul représentant syndical de la boîte c un mec de la CFDT jlui demande vous avez toujours été syndicaliste il me répond je suis pas syndicaliste j'aide la discussion entre les employés et la direction que je connais bien. cet enfoiré
3 notes · View notes
aurevoirmonty · 1 month ago
Text
Tumblr media
Je crois que le peuple breton a changé de nature. Quand la mer était cruelle et quand la terre était pauvre, les Bretons étaient une grande race. Maintenant qu'ils sont CFTC, CFDT, lecteurs d'Ouest France, ouailles et curés socialistes, je ne sais pas.
« Entretien vérité avec Jean-Marie Le Pen », Jean-Marie Le Pen, propos recueillis par Eugène Krampon, Réfléchir & Agir (ISSN 1273-6643), nº 31, hiver 2009, p. 34
3 notes · View notes
francaistoutsimplement · 11 months ago
Text
RACLURES POUR SAUVER MACRON!
Raclures un jour, raclures toujours...
La pétition appelant à la reconstitution du « bloc central » pour sauver Macron.
Celle que Laurence Tubiana, la représentante de l’hyper classe mondialisé américaine, candidate du PS, des Verts et du PcF au poste de premier ministre. Il faut regarder la liste, elle vaut le déplacement.
L'On y trouve les syndicalistes jaunes de la CFDT (Édouard Martin, Thierry Cadart), les écolos avides (Bové, Mamère), les renégats communistes (Patrick Braouezec, Joel Decaillon), les universitaires de cour (Prochasson, Pranchère, Stora), les pires ministres socialistes (Marisol Touraine, Aurélie Filippetti), les cultureux subventionnés (Ariane Mnouchkine, Cyril Dion), etc. etc.
La petite gauche est là, fidèle au poste quand il s’agit d’arranger les bidons du Capital. Il n’y a pas François Hollande, mais c’est pour la prochaine fois.
Alors les amis de LFI, vous avez mal au cul ? On dirait que votre stratégie pour faire la courte échelle au PS, ce n’était peut-être pas une si bonne idée ?
En même temps c’était sûr. Comme disait Zorrino du lama du capitaine Haddock : « Quand PS sent le pouvoir, PS toujours faire comme ça »
lettreouverte.notion.site/Lettre-ouverte
(Source X regisdecastelnau)
9 notes · View notes
mel-et-ses-histoires · 4 months ago
Text
5 notes · View notes
leschauffeurssolidaires · 6 months ago
Text
Pourquoi rejoindre la CFDT en 2025 ?
Vous vous posez des questions sur votre avenir professionnel ? Vous souhaitez vous sentir plus protégé(e) au sein de votre entreprise ? La CFDT est faite pour vous ! Rejoindre la CFDT, c’est faire le choix de l’engagement, de la solidarité et de la défense de vos droits. Mais au-delà de ces valeurs fondamentales, quels sont les avantages concrets à adhérer ? 1. Un accompagnement personnalisé Des…
0 notes
dailyanarchistposts · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
Getting together
When the news of the first factory occupation (that of the Sud Aviation plant at Nantes) reached the Sorbonne — late during the night of Tuesday 14 May — there were scenes of indescribable enthusiasm. Sessions were interrupted for the announcement. Everyone seemed to sense the significance of what had just happened. After a full minute of continuous, delirious cheering, the audience broke into a synchronous, rhythmical clapping, apparently reserved for great occasions.
On Thursday 16 May the Renault factories at Cléon (near Rouen) and at Flins (North West of Paris) were occupied. Excited groups in the Sorbonne yard remained glued to their transistors as hour by hour news came over of further occupations. Enormous posters were put up, both inside and outside the Sorbonne, with the most up-to-date information of which factories had been occupied: the Nouvelles Messageries de Presse in Paris, Kléber Colombes at Caudebec, Dresser-Duiardin at Le Havre, the naval shipyard at Le Trait...and finally the Renault works at Boulogne Billancourt. Within 48 hours the task had to be abandoned. No noticeboard — or panel of noticeboards — was large enough. At last the students felt that the battle had really been joined.
Early on the Friday afternoon an emergency ‘General Assembly’ was held. The meeting decided to send a big student deputation to the occupied Renault works. lts aim was to establish contact, express student solidarity and, if possible, discuss common problems. The march was scheduled to leave the Place de la Sorbonne at 6pm. At about 5pm thousands of leaflets were suddenly distributed in the amphitheaters, in the Sorbonne yard and in the streets around. They were signed by the Renault Bureau Of the CGT. The Communist Party had been working...fast. The leaflets read: “We have just heard that students and teachers are proposing to set out this afternoon in the direction of Renault. This decision was taken without consulting the appropriate trade union sections of the CGT, CFDT and FO. “We greatly appreciate the solidarity of the students and teachers in the common struggle against the ‘pouvoir personnel’ (ie de Gaulle) and the employers. but are opposed to any ill-judged initiative which might threaten our developing movement and facilitate a provocation which would lead to a diversion by the government. We strongly advise the organizers of this demonstration against preceding with their plans. “We intend, together with the workers now struggling for their claims, to lead our own strike. We refuse any external intervention, in conformity with the declaration jointly signed by the CGT, CFDT and FO unions, and approved this morning by 23,000 workers belonging to the factory.”
The distortion and dishonesty of this leaflet defy description. No-one intended to instruct the workers how to run the strike and no student would have the presumption to seek to assume its leadership. AlI that the students wanted was to express solidarity with the workers in what was now a common struggle against the state and the employing class.
The CGT leaflet came like an icy shower to the less political students and to all those who still had illusions about Stalinism. “They won’t let us get through.” “The workers don’t want to talk with us.” The identification of workers with ‘their’ organizations is very hard to break down. Several hundred who had intended to march to Billancoud were probably put off, The UNEF vacillated, reluctant to lead the march in direct violation of the wishes of the CGT. Finally some 1500 people set out, under a single banner, hastily prepared by some Maoist students. The banner proclaimers ‘The strong hands of the working class must now take over the torch from the fragile hands of the students’. Many joined the march who were not Maoists and who didn’t necessarily agree with this particular formulation of its objectives.
Although small when compared to other marches, this was certainly a most political one. Practically everyone on it belonged to one or other of the ‘groupuscules’: a spontaneous united front of Maoists, Trotskyists, anarchists, the comrades of the Mouvement du 22 Mars and various others. Everyone knew exactly what he was doing. It was this that was so to infuriate the Communist Party. The march sets off noisily, crosses the Boulevard St Michel, and passes in front of the occupied Odeon Theatre (where several hundred more joyfully join it). It then proceeds at a very brisk pace down the rue de Vaugirard, the longest street in Paris, towards the working class districts to the South West of the city, growing steadily in size and militancy as it advances. It is important we reach the factory before the Stalinists have time to mobilize their big battalions...
Slogans such as “Avec nous, chez Renault” (come with us to Renault), “Le pouvoir est dans la rue” (power lies in the street), Le pouvoir aux ouvriers” (power to the workers) are shouted lustily, again and again. The Maoists shout “A bàs Ie gouvernement gaulliste anti-populaire de chomage et de misère” — a long and ‘politically equivocal slogan, but one eminently suited to collective shouting. The Internationals bursts out repeatedly, sung this time by people who seem to know the words — even the second verse! By the time we have marched the five milks to Issy-les-Moulineaux it is already dark. Way behind us now are the bright lights of the Latin Quarter and of the fashionable Paris known to tourists. We go through small, poorly-lit streets, the uncollected rubbish piled high In places. Dozens of young people join us en route, attracted by the noise and the singing of revolutionary songs such as ‘La Jeune Garde’, ‘Zimmerwald’, and the song of the Partisans, “chez Renault, chez Renault” the marchers shout. People congregate in the doors of the bistros, or peer out of the windows of crowded fiats to watch us pass. Some look on in amazement but many — possibly a majority — now”’ clap or wave encouragement. In some streets many Algerians fine the pavement. Some join in the shouting of CSCRS — SS”’ “Charonne”’ “A bàs I’Etat policier” They have not forgotten. Most look on shyly or smile in an embarrassed way. Very few join the march.
On we go, a few miles more. There isn’t a gendarme in sight. We cross the Seine and eventually stow down as we approach a square beyond which lie the Renault works. The streets here arc very badly-lit. There is a sense of intense excitement in the air. We suddenly come up against a lorry, parked across most of the road, and fitted with loudspeaker equipment. The march stops. On the lorry stands a CGT official. He speaks for five minutes. In somewhat chilly tones he says how pleased he is to see us. “Thank you for coming, comrades. We appreciate your solidarity. But please no provocations. Don’t go too near the gated as the management would use it as an excuse to call the police. And go home soon. lt’s cold and you’ll need all your strength in the days to come.” The students have brought their own loud hailers. One or two speak, briefly. They take note of the comments of the comrade from the CGT. They have no intention of provoking anyone, no wish to usurp anyone’s functions, We then slowly but quite deliberately move forwards into the square, on each side of the lorry, drowning the protests of about a hundred Stalinists in a powerful ‘lnternationale’. Workers in neighbouring cafes come out and join us. This time the Party had not had time to mobilize its militants. It could not physically isolate us.
Part of the factory now looms up right ahead of us, three storeys high on our left, two storeys high on our right, In front of us, there is a giant metal gate, closed and bolted. A large first floor window to our right is crowded with workers. The front row sit with their legs dangling over the sill. Several seem in their teens’, one of them waves a big red flag. There are no ‘tricolores’ in sight — no ideal allegiance’ as in other occupied places I had seen. Several dozen more workers are on the roofs of the two buildings. We wave. They wave back. We sing the ‘Internationale’. They join in. We give the clenched fist salute. They do likewise. Everybody cheers. Contact has been made. An interesting exchange takes place. A group of demonstrators stabs shouting “Les usines aux ouvriers” (the factories to the workers). The slogan spreads like wildfire through the crowd. The Maoists, now in a definite minority, are rather annoyed. (According to Chairman Mao, workers’ control is a petty-bourgeois, anarcho- syndicaiist deviation.) “les usines aux ouvriers”..10, 20 times the slogan reverberates round the Place Nationals, taken up by a crowd now some 3000 strong.
As the shouting subsides, a lone voice from one of the Renault roofs shouts back’. “La Sorbonne aux Etudiants”. Other workers on the same roof take it up. Then those on the other roof. By the volume of their voices they must be at beast 100 of them, on top of each building. There is then a moment of silence. Everyone thinks the exchange has come to an end. But one of the demonstrators starts chanting’. “La Sorbonne aux ouvriers”. Amid general laughter, everyone joins in.
We start talking. A rope is quickly passed down from the window, a bucket at the end of it, Bottles of beer and packets of fags are passed up. Also revolutionary leaflets. Also bundles of papers (mainly copies of Server Ie Peuple — a Maoist journal carrying a big title ‘Vive la CGT’). At street level there are a number of gaps in the metal facade of the building. Groups of students cluster at these half-dozen openings and talk to groups of workers on the other side. They discuss wages, conditions, the CRS, what the lads inside need most, how the students can help. The men talk freely. They are not Party members. They think the constant talk of provocateurs a bit far-fetched. But the machines must be protected. We point out that two or three students inside the factory, escorted by the strike committee, couldn’t possibly damage the machines. They agree. We contrast the widely open doors of the Sorbonne with the heavy locks and bolts on the Renault bates — closed by the CGT officials to prevent the ideological contamination of ‘their’ militants. How silly, we say, to have to talk through these stupid little slits in the wall.
Again they agree. They will put it to their ‘dirigeants’ (leaders), No-one seems, as yet, to think beyond this. There is then a diversion. A hundred yards away a member of the FER gets up on a parked car and starts making a speech through a Ioud hailer. The intervention is completely out of tune with the dialogue that is just starting. it’s the same gramophone record we have been hearing all week at the Sorbonne. “CaII on the union leaders to organism the election of strike committees in every factory. Force the union leaders to federate the strike committees. Force the union leaders to set up a national strike committee. Force them to call a general strike throughout the whole of the country” (this at a time when millions of workers are already on strike without any call whatsoever). The tone is strident, almost hysterical, the misjudging of the mood monumental. The demonstrators themselves drown the speaker in a loud ‘Internationale’. As the last bar fades the Trotskyist tries again. Again the demonstrators drown him, Groups stroll up the Avenue Yves Kermen, to the other entrances to the factory. Real contact is here more difficult to establish. There is a crowd outside the gate, but most of them are Party members. Some won’t talk at all, Others just talk slogans.
We walk back to the Square. It is now well past midnight. The crowd thins, Groups drop into a couple of cafes which are still open. Here we meet a whole group of young workers, aged about 18, They had been in the factory earlier in the day. They tell us that at any given time, just over 1000 workers are engaged in the occupation. The strike started on the Thursday afternoon, at about 2pm, when the group of youngsters from shop 70 decided to down tools and to spread into all part: of the factory asking their mates to do likewise. That same morning they had heard of the occupation of Cléon and that the red flag was floating over the factory at Flins. There had been a int of talk about what to do. At a midday meeting tile CGT had spoken vaguely of a series of rotating strikes, shop by shop, to be initiated the following day. The movement spread at an incredible pace. The youngsters went round shouting “Occupation! Occupationl”. Half the factory had stopped working before the union officials realized what was happening. At about 4pm, Sylvain, a CGT secretary, had arrived with loudspeaker equipment to tell them “they weren’t numerous enough, to start work again, that they would see tomorrow about a one-day strike”. He is absolutely by-passed. At 5pm Halbeher, general secretary of the Renault CGT, announces, pale as a sheet, that the “CGT has called for the occupation of the factor”. “Tell your friends”, the lads say. “We started it. But will we be able to keep it in our hands? Cà, c’est un autre problème...”
Students? Well, hats off to anyone who can thump the cops that hard! The lads tell up two of their mates had disappeared from the factory altogether 10 days ago “to help the Revolution”. Left family, jobs, everything. And good luck to them. “A chance like this comes once in a lifetime.” We discuss plans, how to develop the movement. The occupied factory could be a ghetto, ‘isolant Ies durs’ (isolating the most militant). We talk about camping, the cinema, the Sorbonne, the future. Almost until sunrise... ‘Attention aux provocateurs’
Social upheavals, such as the one France has just been through, leave behind them a trail of shattered reputations. The image of Gaullism as a meaningful way of life, ‘accepted’ by the French people, has taken a tremendous knock. But so has the image of the Communist Party as a viable challenge to the French Establishment, As far as the students are concerned the recent actions of the PCF (Parti Communiste Français) are such that the Party has probably sealed its fate in this milieu for a generation to come, Among the workers the effects are more difficult to assess and it would be denature to attempt this assessment. All that can be said is that the effects are sure to be profound although they will probably take some time to express themselves. The proletarian condition itself was for a moment questioned. Prisoners who have had a glimpse of freedom do not readily resume a life sentence.
The full implications of the role of the PCF and of the CGT have yet to be appreciated by British revolutionaries, They need above all else to be informed. In this section we will document the role of the PCF to the best of our ability, It is important to realise that for every ounce of shit thrown at the students in its official publications, the Party poured tons more over them at meetings or in private conversations. In the nature of things it is more difficult to document this kind of slander.
8 notes · View notes
beardedmrbean · 5 months ago
Text
Newly appointed French Prime Minister François Bayrou expressed optimism on Friday on passing an alternative to President Emmanuel Macron's controversial pension reforms by the end of May.
Trade union and employer representatives are to hold discussions on the reform from mid-February to resolve conflict on the way a reduction in pensionable age was pushed through without a vote in the National Assembly.
Following an initial meeting on Friday, Bayrou said he was convinced that his efforts could lead to positive results.
Months-long mass protests erupted in France after the reform was pushed through at the beginning of 2023, raising the pensionable age in stages from 62 to 64.
Marylise Léon, head of the CFDT union, said the union continued to reject paying pensions only from 64. She nevertheless expressed optimism following the meeting.
Speaking for the CGT union, Sophie Binet said the discussions had shown how big the differences were.
Éric Chevée of the CPME association of smaller businesses said ahead of the meeting: "If employer contributions are to rise, there will be no agreement." He stressed that this was a red line for the association.
If the discussions fail to reach an outcome, Macron's reforms will stand.
Bayrou, who describes himself as a centrist, has called on both sides to arrive at a reform that is socially more equitable without additional costs.
He needs support from the leftwing parties for his minority government to survive.
On Thursday, the prime minister survived a vote of no-confidence in the National Assembly after socialist members and the far-right National Rally withheld support for the motion put forward by the hard-left La France insoumise (France Unbowed) party.
2 notes · View notes
sebiblr · 2 years ago
Text
Tumblr media
0 notes