Louvre workers vote to strike in another blow to the Paris museum
[December 15, 2025] By
SYLVIE CORBET and JOHN LEICESTER
PARIS (AP) — Workers at the Louvre Museum voted Monday to strike over
working conditions and other complaints, dealing another blow to the
Paris landmark and home of the “Mona Lisa” after an embarrassing jewelry
heist in October.
The CFDT union said the vote was taken at a meeting of 400 workers on
Monday morning and that they decided to strike for the day. Striking
workers with flags, banners and placards blocked the museum’s iconic
glass pyramid entrance.
The world’s most-visited museum didn’t open as scheduled and turned
people away. A notice on the Louvre's website said “the museum is closed
for the moment.”
“It's really sad, because I was really looking forward to this,” said
Lindsey Hall, a bitterly disappointed would-be visitor from Sacramento,
California. She had been planning to enjoy the museum's huge collection
of art and artifacts with a friend, describing it as “one of those life
experiences you crave.”

“This is just an epic collection of art and something that every human
should see," she said. “I can see the other side of it, like if you are
the person that works in the museum and how that can be, like day after
day after day."
The strike vote followed talks last week between labor unions and
government officials including Culture Minister Rachida Dati. Labor
leaders said the talks had not alleviated their concerns about staffing
and financing for the museum that welcomes millions of visitors each
year.
“Visiting the museum has become an obstacle course,” said Alexis Fritche,
general secretary of the culture wing of the CFDT union.
For employees, the brazen daylight jewel heist crystallized
long-standing concerns that crowding and thin staffing are undermining
security and working conditions at the Louvre.
Police arrests subsequently snared the entire four-man team alleged to
made off with $102 million worth of jewels. The gang used a basket lift
to reach the Louvre’s facade, forced a window, smashed display cases and
fled with pieces of the French crown jewels. A Senate inquiry released
last week said the thieves escaped with barely 30 seconds to spare and
pointed fingers of blame at broken cameras, outdated equipment,
understaffed control rooms and poor coordination that initially sent
police to the wrong location.
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 In a statement, the CFDT said
employees wants more staffing for security and to welcome visitors,
improved working conditions, stable long-term budgets for the Louvre
and leadership that “truly listens to staff.”
Yvan Navarro of the CGT union complained that staff numbers have
continually decreased while visitor numbers have increased.
“People come to Paris to visit the museums. So the visitor numbers
go up, the tariffs and the prices go up, because everything is
becoming more expensive but the salaries and the numbers of staffers
don't go up so obviously you reach a point like today, a day of
anger," he said.
He said the strike vote was unanimous. It wasn't immediately clear
whether the work stoppage will last longer than one day. The Louvre
is closed on Tuesdays. Employees could meet again on Wednesday to
decide whether to stay out or go back to work.
In their notice of open-ended strike action to Dati last week, the
CFDT, CGT and Sud unions said the Louvre was in “crisis,” with
insufficient resources and “increasingly deteriorated working
conditions.”
The Culture Ministry said Sunday that it has tasked Philippe Jost,
who oversaw reconstruction of Notre Dame Cathedral after its 2019
fire, with a mission to propose a deep reorganization of the Louvre
following the findings of an administrative inquiry.
It said Jost will offer recommendations by the end of February. He
will work with Louvre director Laurence des Cars, who previously
described the heist as a “terrible failure.”
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