6x1 PEC Enters Decisive Week After Meeting of Lula and Motta
7 Articles
7 Articles
The meeting between the President of the Republic and the Head of the House takes place on the eve of the presentation of the report of the proposal, which reduces the weekly working day to 40 hours
There is, however, still a deadlock over the transition period for companies to adapt to change.
While President Lula (PT) meets on Monday, 25, with the President of the Chamber, Hugo Motta (Republicans-PB), to discuss the processing of the PEC that ends with the 6×1 scale, the Minister of Labor, Luiz Marinho, once again defends the immediate adoption of the measure. During public hearing held at the Legislative Assembly of Minas Gerais, in... The post While Lula discusses 6×1 with Motta, Marinho collects immediate change appeared first on …
The agenda for the week of Monday (May 25, 2026) to Friday (May 29, 2026) will highlight negotiations on the Proposed Amendment to the Constitution to end the 6 x 1 work schedule, the release of economic indicators by the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics, and the end of the voting period in the Supreme Federal Court on actions regarding changes to the Clean Record Law. On Monday (May 25, 2026), President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva …
President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva (PT) and the Speaker of the Chamber of Deputies, Hugo Motta (Republicans-PB), must meet on Monday, 25, to try to untie the final text of the Proposal for an Amendment to the Constitution (PEC) which provides for the end of the working day on the 6x1 scale.The expectation is that the meeting will help to close an agreement on the transitional rule for the adoption of the 40-hour working week with two days off, …
Voting on the end of the 6x1 schedule enters the final stretch this week. Already on Monday (25), deputies will move forward to contain the wave of negative criticism surrounding Constitutional Amendment Proposal (PEC) 221/2019, which would reduce the working week to 36 hours only within a period of 10 years. The project, signed by 176 parliamentarians, would even allow the legalization of longer weekly working hours than the current 44 hours, i…
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