Labour reform voted down in Parliament: the Government loses, but vows to keep pushing
The package of changes to labour law fell in the Assembly. Montenegro points at Chega and says he "won't give up".
The Government took the kind of defeat you notice. The package to overhaul labour law — one of the big bets of Luís Montenegro’s government — was voted down in the Assembly of the Republic. Without a guaranteed majority, the prime minister couldn’t gather enough votes to push it through.
After the vote, Montenegro didn’t hide his frustration and pinned the outcome on Chega, stressing that “pensions are sacred” and that the Government “will not give up” on giving the country the conditions to be more competitive. Translation: the idea will be back, perhaps in a different outfit.
For anyone outside the political bubble, here’s the part that matters: the rules of work — contracts, hours, dismissals — aren’t changing for now. What was on the table is on hold, and it all hinges on whether the Government can stitch together deals it doesn’t currently have.
Without taking sides
It’s a portrait of a minority government: it governs, but has to negotiate everything. Some see the rejection as a defence of workers; others, a country missing a chance to modernise. The practical truth is soberer — without agreement in Parliament, the big reforms wait.
Illustrative · Photo: Christian Wasserfallen / Pexels