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After Nationwide Strike, Portugal Presses On With Labor Code Overhaul

A minority government expects to pass more than 100 labor‑code changes with backing from liberal and far‑right parties.

Overview

  • The one-day action on 11 December produced broad disruption across transport, schools, hospitals and industry, with the Lisbon metro closed, major rail cancellations, ports shuttered and Volkswagen’s Setúbal plant largely halted.
  • TAP Air Portugal operated only minimum-service flights, with union officials saying about 63 of 283 scheduled flights went ahead.
  • CGTP‑IN and UGT called it the biggest strike since 2013 and cited participation above three million, a figure the government disputed as it said most people were at work.
  • The proposed reform seeks greater flexibility by extending temporary contracts, permitting subcontracting after layoffs and expanding minimum services during strikes, while critics warn of weaker leave provisions and easier dismissals.
  • Public support for the strike reached 61% in a local poll, and the debate has intensified as the measure advances during the run-up to the early‑2026 presidential campaign.