I’ve been spending a lot of time in Parisian taxis recently
recalls
Stephen Clarke as he discusses the Uber stiuation in France, where fistfights have broken out among the two groups.
Luckily, my latest book
has attracted enough attention to get me invited to do TV and radio,
and either my publisher or the production company always sends a taxi,
and has one waiting for me after the show.
Occasionally I’ve said non merci during rush hours because then it’s quicker to get the Métro
rather than sit watching a traffic jam, but usually I’ve accepted the
offer with gratitude. When you’ve written a book about France’s
greatest-ever political figure, it’s useful to have some quiet time to
mug up on dates and quotations before going on air.
… a lifelong Parisian who told me that the rules covering taxis today
are based on the code written by Napoleon for cabs in the early 19th
century.
I’ve quite often wished that my taxi driver could have lashed out
with a horsewhip to clear the traffic blocking a junction, but this
wasn’t what he meant. He was making the point that he, like all his
fellow taxi licence holders, has to obey laws, and is part of an
accountable system.
By contrast, he said, the new wave of drivers working for a certain
foreign app-based taxi service (that shall remain nameless), were
“pirates”. Whereas a real taxi driver has to queue up at airports and
can wait two hours or more before he or she’s allowed to go and pick up a
fare, the “pirates” hang around and get calls within minutes from
arriving passengers.
… Things are getting so heated that there have been fights between
angry taxi drivers and the touts loitering in airport arrivals areas.
One taxi driver was recently knifed while sitting in his car. And all
because (so the taxi drivers say) the police is doing nothing to stop
the illegal taxi touting.
Which is why, this Thursday, taxi drivers will be blocking railway
stations and airports in an attempt to force the government to act. If
you’re planning to arrive in Paris or leave on that day, best to use
underground transport and avoid some spectacular gridlock.