Trabalho XXI: the labour reform hits the hard part
The government wants to change more than a hundred articles of the Labour Code. Without a majority, it'll need borrowed votes — and that's where it gets interesting.
Some reforms slip through unnoticed. Others touch everybody’s daily life. The labour one is firmly in the second camp.
The government’s package — branded “Trabalho XXI” — cleared the Cabinet and went to Parliament. It rewrites more than a hundred articles of the Labour Code: it makes dismissals easier, gives companies more leeway over working hours, and reshapes collective bargaining rules. Supporters call it modernising and a productivity boost. Critics call it a door to precarious work. Both readings will sit side by side in the debate.
The maths is in charge
The detail that decides everything is simple: the AD coalition has no majority. To pass anything, it needs votes from outside — and the obvious lenders pull in opposite directions. On the right, Chega has the weight to make or break it; on the left, the PS can bargain or block. Every article could become a trading chip.
What to expect
A final vote could come as soon as late June, but it depends on how deep the line-by-line scrutiny runs. Unions already struck on 3 June and warned it won’t be the last if the text passes unchanged. The short version: plenty of noise still ahead — and it’s worth watching the numbers, not just the speeches.
Illustrative · Photo: Artur Roman / Pexels