The French government defended President Emmanuel Macron, Wednesday, for his use of coarse language in a stepped-up campaign against France's unvaccinated, after his words drew condemnation from the opposition and mixed reactions from voters. Macron said he wanted to "piss off" unvaccinated people by making their lives so complicated they would end up getting jabbed. He was speaking in an interview with Le Parisien newspaper in which he also called unvaccinated people irresponsible and unworthy of being considered citizens.
"A president cannot say such things," Christian Jacob, chair of the conservative Les Republicans party, told parliament as it discussed a bill to make it mandatory for people to show proof of vaccination to enter many enclosed public spaces. But spokesman Gabriel Attal said that, amid a "supersonic" rise in COVID cases, the government stood by Macron's comments. "Who is pissing off who today?" Attal said, quoting health workers struggling to cope or businesses hurt by the pandemic. "It's those who refuse the vaccine." People who got the jab are "exasperated" with the unvaccinated, Prime Minister Jean Castex said. With a presidential election due in April in which he is expected to run, Macron may have calculated that enough people are now vaccinated ― and upset with remaining anti-vaxxers ― for his comment to go down well with voters. In a country where more than 124,000 people have died of COVID-19, his words resonated with some. "He's right," said 89-year-old Paris pensioner Jean, who has had his COVID-19 booster and a flu shot too. "Those who are against the vaccine should understand the dangers, and they should get vaccinated." But others agreed with lawmaker Jacob that Macron's use of the slang term "emmerder" ― from "merde" (shit) ― was unacceptable. "That shows an aggressive side, it's a bad word, it's not very clever of him," said 25-year old sales representative Maya Belhassen. "That's not a good comment from a president," added newspaper seller Pascal Delord. Targeting the sceptics France has historically had more vaccine sceptics than many of its neighbors, and pandemic restrictions have triggered many street protests, but nearly 90 percent of those aged 12 and above have now been inoculated, one of the continent's highest COVID-19 vaccination rates. People have for several months had to show either proof of vaccination or a negative COVID-19 test to enter venues such as cinemas and cafes and use trains. But with Delta and Omicron variant infections surging, the government decided to drop the test option in the new bill. The opposition forced several suspensions of the parliamentary debate on the vaccine pass after the interview was published late Tuesday. "I'm in favor of the vaccine pass but I cannot back a text whose objective is to 'piss off' the French," Jacob told parliament. "Is that your objective, yes or no?" A government source said they were not worried about the adoption of the text, despite the heated parliamentary debate, which resumed Wednesday afternoon, and after hundreds of amendments. The initial plan was for the new legislation to enter into force Jan.15. One day or two of delay would not change much, the source said. After the lower house of parliament eventually votes on it, the bill will go the senate for approval.
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