French president François Hollande appeared determined but optimistic in a live television interview broadcast hours after he was booed at the traditional Bastille Day parade in Paris, reports RFI.
He disapproved of the booing not, he said, because he himself was offended but because it showed a lack of respect for the French Presidency as an office.
Polls show that Hollande is the most unpopular president in modern French history.
In a half hour exchange, sporting his modish new glasses, he defended the controversial Responsibility Pact, a plan to reduce payroll charges paid by employers in return for a commitment to create more jobs.
Both employers and trade unions are currently arguing over the terms of the pact.
Employers say the reductions offered are offset by new constraints and that they cannot create jobs until their order books fill up, while trade unions say the pact is a gift to employers who will guarantee nothing in return.
Hollande told viewers that his current priority was economic reform and that his three-pronged approach was to “support business, reduce household taxes and cut public spending”
The French president stressed his plan to encourage more apprenticeship schemes in France but dodged a question concerning the 35 hour week and France’s employment laws, which offer considerable protection to employees but curtail job creation.
After a protest in Paris on Sunday condemning Israel’s action in Gaza during which some youths tried to storm two synagogues, Hollande declared firmly that France would not tolerate anti-Semititic acts as a response to the current conflict in the Middle East.
Read more of this report from RFI.