Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2007-07-11-Speech-3-202"
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"en.20070711.22.3-202"2
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".
In France
is not an ordinary company; it is a State enterprise, run by revolutionary trade unionists. It is a public service that is totally under the thumb of corporatist, private-sector, interests.
Why strive to protect the public service provided by
when, in reality, it is not one? The customer has nothing to say and the trade unions claim to act in his interests. The boss (the State) and the shareholders (every person in France) are petrified at the idea of seeing the system held up by certain workers who are represented by omnipotent and totalitarian trade unions.
No opposition force is taking action to balance the rights and powers that these workers have granted themselves, and it is the general interest that is being scorned.
Must
be liberalised? Must damage be done to this totally corrupted system, which is aimed not at satisfying customers, but simply at becoming part of the private sector, demonstrating so-called 'acquired' benefits and demanding the preservation of those benefits?
The answer is categorically: yes, and quickly.
must now make huge efforts to make up for its major handicaps, which are: its huge wage bill, its pension burden and its complex, cumbersome, costly and failing organisation."@en1
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