Portugal general strike halts trains, cancels hundreds of flights and closes schools

A general strike disrupted services across Portugal on Wednesday, halting trains, cancelling hundreds of flights and closing schools, as unions protested against the government’s plans to overhaul the country’s labour code.

State-owned railway CP suspended long-distance and most regional services, while Lisbon’s metro shut down. Portugal’s flag carrier TAP said it would operate just 79 of its usual 300-plus daily flights, and Iberia expected reductions of between 50% and 75%. Schools closed nationwide due to staff shortages, and hospitals postponed most surgeries and appointments following a nursing walkout.

The strike, called by Portugal’s largest umbrella union CGTP, is the second general shutdown in six months and the first since an earlier stoppage in December — itself the first since austerity protests in 2013.

Portugal’s minority centre-right government is expected to pass the reform bill with support from the far-right Chega party. The legislation proposes changes to more than 100 articles of the labour code, aimed at boosting productivity and economic growth, after talks with unions collapsed.

CGTP head Tiago Oliveira told Reuters the reforms would worsen workers’ conditions by entrenching precarious employment, deregulating working hours, easing dismissals and curbing strike rights and parental protections.

Rodrigo Azevedo, a 30-year-old bank employee, said the package would leave young workers “stuck on precarious contracts for life,” forcing them to work 50 hours a week without extra pay instead of the current standard 40 hours, while making it easier to dismiss them and replace them with cheaper outsourced labour. “The labor package is a major threat not just to the future of young workers, but to our present,” he said.

The reform envisions making just-cause dismissals easier, allowing companies to deny workers reinstatement in cases of unlawful dismissal provided they pay compensation, and lifting existing limits on outsourcing.

(Reuters)