Parliamentarians call for more debate and delay in ending 6x1 schedule

A coalition of 25 parliamentary fronts linked to the productive sector called on Monday (March 2) for deeper debates and a delay in analyzing proposals to end the 6x1 work schedule, criticizing the calendar proposed by Chamber President Hugo Motta. The group argues that the discussion is tainted by electoral bias, tied to President Lula's campaign. Productive sector representatives warn of negative economic impacts from a quick change.

At a dinner at the headquarters of the Frente Parlamentar pelo Livre Mercado, representatives from 25 parliamentary fronts of the productive sector, such as the Frente Parlamentar pela Melhoria do Ambiente de Negócio and the Frente Parlamentar da Agropecuária, advocated for a 'modernization of the work schedule' instead of an abrupt change to the 6x1 scale. Chamber President Hugo Motta (Republicanos-PB) proposed analyzing a Constitutional Amendment Proposal (PEC) to end the six-workdays-for-one-rest model still in the first semester, with a final vote projected for May.

Group leaders criticized the calendar as 'electioneering', influenced by President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva's (PT) re-election campaign, which prioritizes reducing the maximum workweek to 40 hours without salary cuts. The PEC, presented by Deputy Erika Hilton (PSol-SP), was sent to the Constitution and Justice Committee (CCJ) in early February. The CCJ is expected to conclude its analysis in March, without text changes, deciding only if the matter proceeds. Then, a special committee would discuss the merits, and the plenary would require 308 favorable votes in two rounds for approval.

Pedro Lupion (Republicanos-PR), president of the Frente Parlamentar da Agropecuária, stated: 'We agree to debate, but in depth. What we want is to deeply debate this issue'. He added: 'It cannot happen on the calendar they want. Our point is to debate and find the right path'. The productive sector has already pressured Motta for more discussion time.

During the event, parliamentarians watched a presentation by economist José Eduardo Gibello Pastore on a study by the Associação Brasileira das Companhias Abertas (Abrasca). The document indicates that reducing the workweek to 36 hours without salary cuts would increase the hourly wage by 22% and payroll costs, potentially causing economic contraction and a GDP drop. Deputy Arnaldo Jardim (Cidadania-SP) warned: 'We are not against it, but we need to be coherent. Things will get more expensive. Life will get more expensive. It's swimming against the current. Approving is comfortable, but it doesn't look good on the record'.

In parallel, Antonio Neto, president of the Central dos Sindicatos Brasileiros (CSB), rebuked criticisms from Labor Minister Luiz Marinho on delays in the 6x1 agenda, attributing them to the CUT's stance in previous negotiations. Neto said: 'I disagree with Minister Marinho, this account is not the centrals' unions'. We did not reach an agreement because of a central that went all or nothing on two occasions'. The union centrals state they will continue fighting for workweek reduction in Congress.

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Labor Day rally in São Paulo where workers, unions, and politicians demand an end to the 6x1 schedule and a 40-hour workweek cap.
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Government bets on worker pressure to end 6x1 schedule on Labor Day

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On Labor Day, Lula government ministers called for societal mobilization to pressure Congress to vote on ending the 6x1 schedule. Rallies in São Paulo and Rio gathered workers, unions, and politicians advocating for a 40-hour weekly cap. Chamber president Hugo Motta sped up proceedings by scheduling extra sessions.

Protesters gathered on Avenida Paulista on Monday (25) to demand an end to the 6x1 work schedule and a reduction in the weekly workload from 44 to 40 hours without pay cuts.

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President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva sent a bill to Congress on the night of April 14 with constitutional urgency to end the 6x1 work scale and reduce the workweek to 40 hours. Lula stated it returns time to workers for family and leisure. The text will be protocolled in the Chamber of Deputies on Wednesday (April 15).

The rapporteur of PLP 152/2025, Deputy Augusto Coutinho (Republicanos-PE), requested the postponement of the vote on the bill regulating app-based work, scheduled for Tuesday (April 14) in the Chamber's special committee. The request followed a government plea from then-leader José Guimarães (PT-CE). The government withdrew support due to rejection by delivery workers and drivers.

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