Argentine Minister Patricia Bullrich presents labor reform bill with Ganancias chapter removed during Senate debate.
Argentine Minister Patricia Bullrich presents labor reform bill with Ganancias chapter removed during Senate debate.
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Argentina removes Ganancias chapter from labor reform bill ahead of Senate debate

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In a pivotal update amid union opposition and provincial tensions, the Argentine government announced the removal of the controversial Ganancias (income tax) chapter from its labor reform bill ahead of Wednesday's Senate debate. Patricia Bullrich presented the final version, agreed with allied blocs, to facilitate approval and half-sanction.

Building on recent government confidence and negotiations that strengthened its Senate bloc despite fierce union backlash—including a CGT march—the labor reform bill promoted by Javier Milei's administration reaches the Senate on February 11, 2026. Senator Patricia Bullrich detailed the final version in a 3 p.m. press conference alongside La Libertad Avanza legislators.

The standout change is the removal of the Ganancias article, previously a flashpoint with governors over its status as a coparticipable tax. Though initially slated to remain, its withdrawal clears a path for passage. Bullrich highlighted a 'very solid agreement' with dialoguista legislators and a strong vote count for general and particular sanctions.

Key provisions include reforms to overtime and a 'bank of hours' system: under modified article 197 bis, employers and workers can agree in writing on compensation with limits and oversight. Collective bargaining can set maximum workdays, ensuring 12 hours rest between shifts and 35 weekly hours, using the bank to balance workloads without exceeding legal caps.

Dismissal indemnities remain but with a narrower base, excluding bonuses, vacations, overtime, awards, and commissions. A Labor Assistance Fund, financed by pensions and mandatory, caps claims to statutory amounts, barring additional damages. Fixed-term contract indemnities are limited to seniority pay until term end.

A tweak to solidary contributions has divided business groups like CAME and CAC. Bullrich rebuked Governor Axel Kicillof's opposition and march participation: 'Kicillof, instead of going to the march, get to work and set an example. Less marches and more management.'

The government eyes a March fiscal pact with provinces for tax reforms, aligning national and provincial cuts.

Hva folk sier

Discussions on X highlight Patricia Bullrich's announcement removing the Ganancias chapter from Argentina's labor reform bill to gain Senate approval amid opposition from governors. Journalists report neutrally on the agreement and changes made. Supporters of the government criticize governors for blocking business tax cuts, seeing it as a dilution. Opposition and unions condemn the reform as detrimental to workers' rights.

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Government confident ahead of labor reform Senate debate amid union opposition

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Javier Milei's government expresses optimism for half sanction on its labor reform in the Senate this Wednesday (Feb 11), led by Patricia Bullrich's negotiations. Building on recent bloc strengthening, the initiative faces strong union backlash, including a CGT march, as the ruling party eyes modifications for passage.

The Argentine government estimates it has secured the support of five governors to pass the labor reform, while businesses negotiate changes with Senator Patricia Bullrich to avoid judicial challenges. The bill, aimed at modernizing labor legislation, will be debated in the Senate in February. Business chambers back the overall spirit but seek amendments to specific articles impacting collective bargaining and entity funding.

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Argentina's Senate began debating the labor reform bill pushed by Javier Milei's government on Wednesday, with the ruling party claiming sufficient votes after 28 modifications agreed with the opposition. Outside Congress, a CGT march against the bill turned into clashes with police, involving molotov cocktails, at least 14 arrests, and 15 injuries. Senators from various blocs voiced criticisms and defenses during the session.

Senator Pablo Cervi formalized his affiliation to La Libertad Avanza (LLA), raising the official bloc to 20 members in the Senate, right before the debate on Javier Milei's labor reform. Patricia Bullrich, head of the libertarian bloc, announced a special session for February 11 and claimed to have the necessary votes after meetings with dialoguista allies.

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The General Confederation of Labor (CGT) filed a judicial injunction against the labor reform promulgated on Friday by the Executive Power, numbered 27.802. The lawsuit, assigned to Judge Enrique Lavié Pico, seeks to declare null articles transferring labor competencies to the City of Buenos Aires. The labor federation plans another action in the labor court.

Over 35 industrial unions met on Tuesday at SMATA headquarters to reject the government's labor reform project, claiming it changes rules to harm workers. Figures like Senator Mariano Recalde and Deputy Vanesa Siley criticized the initiative for weakening labor rights and unions. SMATA's Mario Manrique warned governors about workers' votes.

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The General Confederation of Labor (CGT) launched a 24-hour general strike on Thursday, February 19, 2026, protesting the government's labor reform bill debated in the Chamber of Deputies at 2 PM. The action disrupts public transport, air travel, and banking, with support from various unions. The government implemented a plan to ensure quorum for the legislative session.

 

 

 

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