Yolanda Díaz confronted with the discount in working hours: “Calviño and Body are the same” | Economy | EUROtoday

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“I am surprised that at this point the PSOE does not want to comply with the Government agreement to reduce the working day.” This has been the primary response of the second vice chairman and Minister of Labor, Yolanda Díaz, to the statements of the Minister of Economy, Carlos Body, who on Wednesday left the door open to finishing up mentioned discount in working hours step by step, which might indicate that it will likely be utilized in 2026, opposite to what was agreed within the Government settlement, which units the validity of this measure in 2025.

But Díaz has gone additional together with his “disgust” and, throughout an interview in The Sixth, He has customized his anger with Corpus by stating: “I thought that once he had left [la ex ministra de Economía] Nadia Calviño, things were going to change in the Government of Spain, but now we have different people and the behaviors are the same.” An concept that he reiterated later within the interview by saying once more: “Nadia Calviño and Carlos Cuerpo, we are facing the same thing.”

The vice chairman has emphasised her deep discomfort as a result of “at the last moment the PSOE has distanced itself” from the Government settlement that established the appliance of the 37.5 hours per week already subsequent 12 months. According to him, the socialist a part of the Executive – not the president, with whom he has mentioned he has not but spoken about this last-minute conflict – has mentioned in non-public “clearly” that the discount in working time is one thing that “must be take it further, because the legislature is long.”

The vice president, however, has expressed her conviction that an agreement will be reached on this matter. But for now it has left up in the air the date on which Labor will sign the agreement with the unions, as the beginning of the processing of this rule, something that was initially and unofficially scheduled for this Friday. “It will be imminent,” he simply said, without specifying whether it will be before Christmas Eve or the end of the year.

Díaz has considered this a breach of the Government pact and has suggested that, in this way, the socialists conduct politics “with guarantees that aren’t saved.” That, he added, “is what widens the votes of the extreme right.” And she recalled how “happy” she was after listening to on the final PSOE congress, held lately, that one of many proposals was to cut back the working day even additional, to 36 hours every week. About this he requested: “So, how do we do politics, deceiving people?

Body justified that the possibility of carrying out the application of the 37.5-hour work day beyond 2025 is due to the need to negotiate with all parties in the parliamentary arc. Without a majority in Congress supporting the cut, it could never be a reality. However, Díaz wanted to dismantle this reasoning by ensuring that the Government must bring its legal projects to Parliament even if it does not have guaranteed support to approve them, because that, with the current parliamentary framework, “always happens.”

And she added that she is convinced that once the proposal to cut working hours reaches Congress it will go ahead: “We are going to get it out like all the laws.” In reality, he has given this Thursday’s vote on tax issues for instance: “Right now I am going to a vote for which we do not have the votes (…) We have just experienced an agonizing negotiation with the tax reform and today again, We still don’t know what they will vote for. Does this mean that the Government of Spain should stop legislating?” he requested.

The vice president has assured that this need to legislate to negotiate later is what the coalition government has done from the beginning. “If I hadn’t done what I’m doing right now, we wouldn’t have the labor reform, which happened luckily. But there was no support,” he recalled in reference to the erroneous vote of a PP deputy, Alberto Casero, which allowed those regulations to be carried out. Otherwise, it has been questioned whether what happens is that “only the laws that the socialist party wants are presented.” And in reference to the reduction to 37.5 hours of work per week, he emphasized that “the events that vote towards should justify themselves to their voters”, since “two out of each three residents need the working day to be reduce.” , additionally the voters of the PP.”

https://elpais.com/economia/2024-12-19/yolanda-diaz-ante-el-recorte-de-jornada-laboral-calvino-y-cuerpo-son-lo-mismo.html