On 10 November 1947, after the
Gaullist victory of the
Rally of the French People in the municipal election in October, a vast movement of insurrectionary strikes shook the country for several months. It began in
Marseille against
tram fare increases. Four strikers were charged after the demonstrations. To free them, 4,000 demonstrators entered the courthouse and then went to City Hall. They insulted and
defenestrated the Gaullist lawyer
Michel Carlini, who had become alderman by defeating the communist
Jean Cristofol by one vote. The demonstration then moved to the
Opéra de Marseille district, where several nightclub owners were accused of organizing the black market. The young communist worker was killed by the . At his funeral, on 14 November, three fourths of the Marseilles workforce was on strike. The strike spread to miners; on 17 November, 10,000 of them stopped work to protest the dismissal of , the communist deputy director of the nationalized coal mines in the
Nord-Pas-de-Calais basin. The next day, more than 80,000 miners were on strike. On 19 November, the strike resumed at Renault and Citroën and then spread to the
Federation for National Education, the construction trade, steelworkers, dockworkers and all public services. In the
Seine department, teachers went on strike for two weeks although the National Teachers' Union (SNI) refused to support the movement. On 29 November, 30,000 striking mining, railway, and textile workers demonstrated in
Saint-Étienne. Armed with iron bars, they faced the
Compagnies Républicaines de Sécurité (CRS), which had been newly created by the socialist Interior Minister
Jules Moch (
SFIO), who also appealed to the army and the
11th Parachute Shock Regiment, the armed wing of the
Service de documentation extérieure et de contre-espionnage (SDECE), to break the strikes. The creation of the riot police was to ensure the loyalty of police "relocating" the maintenance of order (it used police from across the country, not just in the locations concerned, to quell the riots). In the north, the military nevertheless assured that it would intervene only in case of violence and tolerate the miners if they had only stopped working. In Saint-Étienne, protesters took advantage by riding on three military vehicles, which were armed with
machine guns. The officers refused to fire on the protestors, who got hold of weapons from soldiers (they discreetly returned them afterwards) and forced the police to evacuate the station; 100 people were injured. Among the miners, there were 100 sackings, 1000 suspensions and 500 forced displacements of (miners) from one mine to another. During December debates, the legislation and the union were split. On the night of 2 to 3 December 1947, activists of the Federation of
Pas-de-Calais CGT sabotaged the Paris-
Tourcoing rail link by unbolting two rails, which caused a train derailment near
Arras at 3 am, leaving 16 people dead and 50 wounded. PCF General Secretary
Maurice Thorez was concerned about the radicalization of the movement, as shown in the reports of SDECE. Saboteur activists believed that the train was carrying CRS officers to support non-strikers from
Arras who were supported by the Gaullist militants. The government was secretly negotiating with the PCF by exchanging immunity of four activists to the party supporting the resumption of work. On 30 June 1953, the Supreme Court delivered a leading case and considered that the train was still responsible because it had, given the social climate, expected that kind of act. In March 1954, the case rebounded when the former deputy , formerly "Colonel Baudouin" of the
Francs-tireurs et partisans and former leader of the Federation of Pas-de-Calais in 1947, was found dead in Paris. Refusing to criticize his superior to the central committee, Auguste Lecoeur, former deputy secretary of state who was responsible for the sabotage, committed suicide. ==Discussions in December==