Peronism beyond resistance preparing to discuss labor reform The government says it aims to impose sanctions at an extraordinary session of parliament starting with the change of members of parliament in December. While waiting to learn about the project that Javier Millay will submit to Congress, members of the Patria Union A compilation of initiatives that have already been announced and other initiatives that will eventually take shape. In the coming weeks, it will put together a kind of “regulatory complex” to change the law generally in the opposite direction to La Libertad Avanza.
“We’re going to have a discussion. We want labor reform. It’s not what the government is trying to tell us, but that’s still up in the air.”said a representative of the Union por la Patria parliamentary bloc. Labor union members will play a leading role in the debate. In this case, as a general rule, No cracks due to Peronist inside: Sergio Palazzo, Vanessa Scilly and Mario Manrique will work alongside Cristina Kirchner in conjunction with Hugo Jaski in Axel Kisilov’s sector. In December, Hugo Moyano, the son of a truck driver leader listed by the Buenos Aires governor, will take office.
Mr. Palazzo is vice chairman of the House Labor Law Committee, which is responsible for coordinating the bloc’s projects related to labor regulation. If the government document includes issues such as salary for up to 10 people, no calculation of compensation, and return of so-called basketball tickets, Peronism will oppose. Or at least a majority. This is because the ruling party is trying to open up a rift through negotiations with the governor. Osvaldo Jardo, a native of Tucuman, was already winking at Casa Rosada for the debate.
Then, beyond this refusal, the representatives of Fuerza Patria will propose Amendments to employment contract law, shortened working days, right to digital disconnection, extension of parental leave for childbirth or adoptionThere are points such as. The aim will be to confront the ruling party on two opposing lines regarding possible labor law reforms.
If what has been revealed is confirmed and the government promotes longer working hours and the possibility of establishing a time banking mechanism to compensate, Peronism will increase its commitment from the current 48 hours a week to 40 hours (included in the project prepared by Yasky) or 36 hours (Palazzo). “If there is a reduction, we can accept a few hours of banking.”they put it out as a condition.
Similarly, if the ruling party proposes the possibility of splitting the holiday and making it for a period other than the period from October 1st to April 30th, the Union por la Patria will ask for the holiday to be set between December and March. He will also defend projects that give people greater freedom to take on side jobs if they are not part of the same type of activity, and a regulatory framework for digital platform workers.
“Millais’s labor reforms are a reheated stew of already failed recipes.. “They want to sell it to us as a novelty, but it’s a jumping off point that takes us back to the Infamous Decade,” Yassky said in response to a question. clarion. “It would be a lie to say that there are no suggestions. We have a series of projects that form a collection of regulations to extend new types of rights in the face of new forms of employment relations.” has completed the list of members whose seats will be renewed in December.
In a letter from February last year, Christina Kirchner mused: “It’s inevitable.” Discuss what he calls the “employment renewal plan.” “Rights come with duties that must be fulfilled; if they are not, they are no more or less a privilege.”he claimed at the time.
Perhaps as one of the blows of the October 26 election defeat, Senate Peronism last week took a less harsh position than the Radicals and other opponents on DNU legal reform. “There are many proposals on how to improve industrial relations, but we do not know whether this can be achieved within this framework or whether the government will want to negotiate.”raised one of the former president’s main swords in the Senate.