Government refines reform of public servants' paid leave authorizations

The Ministry of Public Service will present on Tuesday, January 27, its initial reform tracks on paid special leave authorizations for public agents, related to parenthood and family events. This move responds to a Council of State injunction from December 10, 2025, requiring a decree within six months under the 2019 public service transformation law. Unions are already denouncing a potential reduction in rights regarding child care.

The French government is progressing on a reform awaited for over six years regarding public servants' paid leave authorizations. These remunerated absences, granted for family or parental reasons, are the subject of a decree that the Ministry of Public Service must finalize. On December 10, 2025, the Council of State ordered the executive to publish this text within six months, in accordance with the 2019 public service transformation law.

This law had provided for a decree to define a common list of these authorizations, to address disparities between administrations. Until now, the granting of these leaves has largely been at the discretion of public services, leading to heterogeneous practices. To justify the delay, the State cited the need for an 'in-depth dialogue' with unions, as well as the disruptions caused by the Covid-19 crisis on negotiations. These explanations did not convince the Council of State, located at the Palais-Royal.

The presentation of the work tracks, scheduled for January 27, is expected to fuel heated debates. Unions, as reported by Le Monde, are denouncing a reduction in rights, especially concerning child care. This reform aims to standardize rules at the national level but risks sparking tensions with public agents' representatives.

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Photo illustrating the uncertain adoption of the 2026 budget in the French National Assembly, showing lawmakers in tense debates over a patchwork finance bill.
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Adoption of 2026 budget in National Assembly increasingly uncertain

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After several days of intense debates in the National Assembly, the 2026 finance bill increasingly resembles a 'Frankenstein' budget, a patchwork of contradictory amendments complicating its final adoption. The executive, avoiding Article 49.3, faces strong opposition on measures like the surtax on multinationals and limits on sick leave. Lawmakers from all sides have adopted or suppressed key provisions, raising the risk of overall rejection.

The expected savings from reducing sick leave compensation in the public sector are not materializing as hoped. Public sector employees are adopting strategies to retain their full salary despite the reform. Announced in October 2024, this measure aimed to curb costly absenteeism for the state.

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On December 26, 2025, France's Ministry of Health and Families announced a delay for the new supplementary birth leave from January 1, 2026, to July 2026, citing technical rollout needs. Parents of children born or adopted from January to May 2026 can access it until year-end. The reform, part of a push against declining birth rates, supplements existing maternity and paternity leaves.

Brazil's lower house approved on Tuesday, November 4, a bill gradually extending paternity leave from 5 to 20 days, starting in 2027. The text, reported by Deputy Pedro Campos (PSB-PE), returns to the Senate for further review after amendments. The measure includes full government payment and additional benefits for specific cases.

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Building on the joint committee's failure on December 19, Parliament is accelerating adoption of a special law early next week to secure temporary state financing from January 1, while Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu launches consultations with party leaders starting Sunday. Impacts include the suspension of the MaPrimeRénov' program.

Gabriel Boric's government included provisions in the public sector readjustment bill restricting civil servant dismissals, drawing criticism from president-elect José Antonio Kast's team, who call them a breach of trust. Arturo Squella, Republican Party president, warned that these measures undermine relations between administrations. The executive defends them as formalizing existing rules.

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French lawmakers began examining the 2026 social security financing bill on October 27, 2025, amid tensions over suspending the pension reform and drastic savings measures. A government amendment increasing the surtax on large companies was adopted, while the Zucman tax debate was postponed. Discussions are set to be contentious with a projected deficit of 17.5 billion euros.

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