Labour law rejected: so what does the government do next?
After parliament blocked the rewrite of the Labour Code, Montenegro vows to try again. But the maths in the chamber hasn't changed.
The government’s proposal to rework the Labour Code got a no from parliament, and it was a no with plenty of company: voting against were Chega, the PS, Livre, the PCP, the BE, PAN and JPP. In favour stood only the PSD, the CDS and the Liberal Initiative. In politics, when the left and André Ventura’s party vote on the same side, it’s a sign the topic has legs.
Why it fell
The government insists it negotiated seriously, above all with Chega, and that on most points there was even agreement. The knot tightened on one issue: Chega demanded changes to the sustainability of Social Security and an opening to alter the retirement age. The government refused, and without those votes the proposal was left without a net.
What comes next
Luís Montenegro has already said he won’t give up and that parliament “will have its moment” on this. In the meantime he’s promising new measures for families, perhaps a way to show movement while the labour reform sits on the back burner. The problem is arithmetic: the make-up of the chamber hasn’t changed, and any new version needs to find a majority that, for now, doesn’t exist.
For workers, the translation is that day-to-day rules — hours, dismissals, contracts — stay as they are for now. Nothing changes tomorrow. But the tug-of-war will go on, and it promises to be one of the threads running through this second term.
See also: PS blocks the labour reform and the government’s agenda on immigration and work. You can follow the debates on the Parliament website.
Imagem: Wikimedia Commons