Tens of thousands rally in Lisbon against planned labour reforms

A woman reacts as protestors participate in a demonstration organised by Portugal’s largest labour union confederation CGTP, against the labour reform the government wants to implement, while calling for better wages and working conditions, in Lisbon, Portugal, April 17, 2026. REUTERS/Pedro Nunes Purchase Licensing Rights

Tens of thousands of people protested in Lisbon on Friday against the government’s planned labour reforms, which unions say would erode ​workers’ rights and deepen job insecurity by making outsourcing easier and curbing ‌payable overtime.
The minority centre-right government approved a draft bill in September to amend the labour code, aiming to tackle structurally low productivity.

But it triggered the country’s first general strike in more than a decade in ​December, with unions accusing the government of siding with employers to strip rights ​from low-paid workers struggling with rising living costs.

Portugal’s largest union, CGTP, said “many ⁠tens of thousands” occupied the capital’s main avenue, while police gave no estimate on ​the number of demonstrators.
Ines Branco, a 33-year-old shop assistant, said the reforms would harm workers “in ​every way” – from making it easier to dismiss staff to reducing time for family life.
She added that none of the changes would improve workers’ lives.
“With the cost of living rising, workers are working ​40 hours a week and still can’t pay the bills at the end of ​the month, while companies are making millions in profits. This is unacceptable,” she said.

The bill is undergoing ‌mandatory ⁠consultations with unions and business groups before being submitted to parliament, where far-right Chega, the largest opposition party, has said it may support it.
Although the government has dropped some fiercely opposed measures – including plans to ease just-cause dismissals – unions say major concerns remain. They ​include proposals to lift ​limits on outsourcing ⁠and to create “individual time banks,” allowing employees to work up to two hours beyond the eight‑hour standard workday without immediate overtime pay, ​offset later within an annual cap of 150 hours.

Source : https://www.reuters.com/business/world-at-work/tens-thousands-rally-lisbon-against-planned-labour-reforms-2026-04-17/

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