Paris is simmering. Not from the summer heat but from a banquet. A lavish, champagne-drenched fête thrown by President Emmanuel Macron for the global elite in the gilded halls of Versailles. For the radical left in France, this is not just a dinner. It is a declaration of war.
As the working class families in the banlieues struggle to put bread on the table following a year of skyrocketing inflation and stagnant wages, images of scallops, truffles, and fine wine at the Elysée Palace's expense have sparked fury. The fact that the guest list read like a who's who of corporate raiders and foreign financiers only deepened the wound.
“This is what arrogance looks like,” said Jean-Luc Mélenchon, leader of La France Insoumise, in a blistering statement. “While workers are forced to choose between heating and eating, Macron throws a party for billionaires. The republic of the rich is becoming a monarchy of the vulgar.”
The anger is palpable. Trade unions are threatening a wave of strikes that could bring the country to a standstill. The CGT, France's largest union, has already called for a national day of action next week. “We will not stand by while a handful of oligarchs toast to their own greed,” said Philippe Martinez, the union's general secretary. “The workers built this nation, and we will bring it to a halt if necessary.”
The backdrop is a France already fractured by a year of pension reform protests, where tear gas clashed with the spirit of the Revolution. Now, class warfare is back in the lexicon of every café and boulevard. The left sees this banquet as proof: Macron's Republic is a gilded cage for the few, a breadline for the many.
Regional inequality adds fuel. In the rustbelt of the north, where factories have been mothballed and young people flee south, the sight of luxury cars whisking bosses to Versailles is a bitter reminder of the gulf. In Marseille, where drug-related violence scars the streets, the banquet feels like a slap.
Macron's government has tried to downplay the backlash. “The event was a standard diplomatic reception,” a spokesperson told reporters. “It is absurd to suggest the President is out of touch. He is working tirelessly to attract investment to France.” But the numbers don't lie. While the CAC 40 index of French stocks hit record highs, real wages have fallen by nearly 3% this year. The GDP per person hides a hollowing out of the middle class.
The radical left is not alone. Even centrist voters are feeling queasy. The banquet, funded by taxpayer money, comes as Macron prepares to slash corporate taxes further. “It’s not just the optics,” said Sophie, a shopkeeper in Lyon. “It’s the message. They think we are stupid. We see where their loyalty lies.”
The question now is whether this anger will translate into action. The unions are mobilising, but they face a divided workforce. Some sectors, like logistics and hospitality, have been hit hard by the cost-of-living crisis and may not risk another day of lost wages. Yet the mood is electric. In the banlieues, where youth unemployment tops 30%, the banquet is a symbol of everything wrong. “They eat while we starve,” read one graffito on a wall in Saint-Denis.
Europe is watching. The rise of the far-right has already shaken the EU's foundations. A left-wing uprising, led by a coalition of trade unions and Mélenchon's populist force, could be equally disruptive. In Germany, which faces its own cost-of-living squeeze, the French riots are a warning. The elite must listen, or the banquet will be remembered as the spark that lit the fire.
For now, the gilded plates and crystal glasses have been cleared away. But the memory of that feast will linger. And in the kitchens of the working class, the anger is boiling over.









