French PM's bakery visit on Labour Day sparks union row over holiday work rules
Sébastien Lecornu buys baguettes and flowers in village as government pushes to allow bakeries and florists to open on 1 May
Auf einen Blick
- French Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu visited a bakery in Saint-Julien-Chapteuil on Labour Day to buy baguettes and flowers, sparking controversy with unions who argue 1 May should remain a compulsory rest day.
- The visit was part of a government drive to exempt independent bakeries and flower shops from mandatory closure, with a bill allowing them to open requiring employee volunteers to work in writing and receive double pay.
- A baker named Eric faces a €5,250 fine for opening on May 1, which Lecornu said he would not have to pay.
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Warum es wichtig ist
May 1 is Labour Day in France and a public holiday with mandatory rest for most workers. Under French law, only essential services like hospitals and hotels may operate, with employees receiving double wages. The status of bakeries and flower shops has been unclear, creating a legal grey area.
French Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu has visited a village bakery to buy several baguettes on Labour Day, reigniting a row with unions who argue that 1 May should remain a compulsory rest day. "Let's have several... at least four," he said, paying at the bakery in Saint-Julien-Chapteuil, central France. The politician also bought some flowers from a nearby florist. The visit was part of a government drive to exempt independent bakeries and flower shops from mandatory rest on Labour Day - a public holiday across the country. Under French law, only essential services such as hospitals and hotels may be open, with employees being paid double wages. The status of bakeries and flower shops is unclear. In response, Marylise Léon, the General Secretary of France's leading union, said: "Politicians going to a bakery, I think that's part of a political spectacle that we don't need today. We need to show what the reality of a bakery worker is like". On Friday, Lecornu also phoned another baker, who had received a fine from labour inspectors for staying open on 1 May. The prime minister reassured the baker named Eric that he would not have to pay, according to France's BFMTV and Europe1 news websites. The baker potentially faces a fine of €5,250 (£4,532; $6,168) - €750 for each of his seven employees working on Labour Day. Earlier this week, the French government presented a bill allowing bakeries and florists to be open on 1 May. The proposal - which needs a parliamentary approval - says employees must state in writing that they volunteer to work, and should also be paid double for that day. The government has been encouraging bakers to work on 1 May, describing them as being "indispensable to the continuity of social life". Meanwhile, labour unions say staff in many cases could be pressured by their employers to volunteer to work or risk their employment contracts. In April, the unions said in a joint statement that "social history shows us that each time a principle is undermined, exemptions gradually increase until they become the rule", according to the AFP news agency.
Worauf zu achten ist
KI-Ausblick — Möglichkeiten, keine Fakten
Parliament will likely approve the bill with amendments requiring stronger worker protections
Wahrscheinlich · Innerhalb von Wochen
Other business sectors will request similar exemptions for future Labour Days
Sehr wahrscheinlich · Innerhalb von Monaten
Offene Fragen
- Will parliament approve the bill?
- Will other sectors demand similar exemptions?
- How will enforcement work if law passes?






