Labour package voted down: Chega sided with the left
The Government's labour-law reform was rejected in parliament. Only PSD, CDS and IL backed it — and the Government says it isn't giving up.
There was a twist on Friday worth unpacking slowly. The Government’s proposal to overhaul Portugal’s labour law — the so-called “labour package” — was voted down in parliament. And the outcome had an unlikely lead character: Chega, which for days had hinted it would let the bill through, ended up voting against.
The result: only PSD, CDS and the Liberal Initiative voted in favour. Against it lined up the entire left — PS, Livre, PCP, Bloco, PAN and JPP — plus Chega. It’s one of those votes where parties that rarely agree on anything found themselves on the same side, each for their own reasons.
What sank the deal
The Government gave ground on plenty during the talks, but not on two sensitive points: the rules on outsourcing tied to dismissals, and the retirement age. That’s exactly where the understanding with André Ventura ran aground. Without agreement there, the bill didn’t pass.
Luís Montenegro responded by saying the Government “will not give up” on making the country more competitive and productive. Translation: this will be back. For workers, the familiar uncertainty remains — for now, the rules of the labour market stay as they were.
Illustrative · Photo: Czapp Árpád / Pexels