France, under pressure from right, toughens stance on immigration - Action News
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France, under pressure from right, toughens stance on immigration

France is to clear out some migrant tent camps, impose quotas for migrant workers and deny newly arrived asylum seekers access to non-urgent health care, in a drive to show voters President Emmanuel Macron is heeding their concerns about immigration.

New measures will impose migrant quotas and raze some tent camps

French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe, speaking during a press conference on immigration on Tuesday, said the country will start setting quotas for migrant workers next year, as the French government seeks to toughen immigration policies in response to right-wing criticism. (Charles Platiau/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)

France is to clear out some migrant tent camps, impose quotas for migrant workers and deny newly arrived asylum seekers access to non-urgent health care, in a drive to show voters President Emmanuel Macron is heeding their concerns about immigration.

"We want to take back control of our immigration policy," French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe, a Macron appointee, told reporters as he unveiled a package of measures on immigration.

"That means when we say yes, it really means yes, and when we say no, it really means no."

Opinion polls show voters are worried about the issue, and that sentiment is driving support for far-right leader Marine Le Pen, who is likely to be Macron's main opponent in the next presidential election in 2022.

Polling shows her popularity is rising with voters, while Macron though still in the lead is slipping back.

A migrant walks past tents at a makeshift camp set along Paris' ring road at the Porte d'Aubervilliers on Oct. 18. (Christophe Archambault/AFP via Getty Images)

Macron's centrist administration has so far resisted pressure from right-wing rivals on immigration, in part because many of his own liberal supporters are uncomfortable with any measures they feel are pandering to xenophobia.

But in announcing the new measures, France joins other European states, among them Italy, Britain and Sweden, that have opted to take tougher approaches on migrants since the outbreak of the Syria conflict in 2011 triggered a migrant crisis across Europe and fuelled populist right-wing parties.

The French prime minister said the 20 new measures on immigration his government unveiled on Wednesday were the mark of a "France that is open but is not naive."

New homes

"I think we have found the right balance between reassuring our citizens and not giving ground to populism," he said.

The prime minister said that migrant tent camps in eastern Paris would be razed by the end of this year, but he did not say what would happen to similar camps in other parts of the country.

At the same time, thousands of new homes would be made available for asylum seekers, he said, so that they could live in dignity.

French President Emmanuel Macron, seen at the Centre Pompidou West Bund Museum in Shanghai, China, on Monday, has so far resisted pressure from right-wing rivals on immigration. (Hector Retamal via Reuters )

Philippe also said the test for acquiring French citizenship would be made more exacting, and that the government would aim to process asylum applications within six months.

Ministers said quotas would be set for people moving legally to France from outside the European Union to work, but without saying what the ceiling would be.

Addressing concerns that France's free health system was attracting illegal migrants, Health Minister Agnes Buzyn said asylum seekers would have to wait three months before being entitled to health care. She said the restriction would not apply to children or emergency care.

In the second quarter of this year, France received 28,575 asylum applications, or 426 per million inhabitants, according to Eurostat data. That is above the EU average of 291 asylum applications per million inhabitants, and puts France in eighth place overall in Europe.

France has the largest Muslim minority in Western Europe, and a large proportion of its immigrant population are from Muslim countries.

Some French people say practices found among immigrant communities, such as Muslim women wearing full-face veils, are at odds with traditional French values, including the official secularism of the French state. Others say such concerns are used to justify racism and xenophobia.

When he was elected in 2017, Macron beat Le Pen nearly two to one in a runoff. An opinion poll conducted late last month by pollster Ifop showed the gap narrowing: if a runoff were to be held now, Macron would get 55 per centwhile Le Pen would have 45 per centsupport, the poll showed.