Congress Launches Nationwide Protests Against 'Anti-Worker' Labour Codes

The Congress party has launched massive nationwide protests against the newly implemented labour codes. Former MP Udit Raj described the laws as a direct assault on India's 44 crore unorganised workers. The party claims the codes will reduce workers' take-home salaries by nearly 50% and weaken workplace safety protections. Congress demands immediate withdrawal of what they call the most dangerous policy ever introduced for Indian workers.

Key Points: Congress Slams New Labour Codes as Anti-Worker Policy

  • Congress calls labour codes draconian assault on 44 crore workers
  • Hire-fire limit increased from 100 to 300 employees without permission
  • Workers' take-home salaries may shrink by 50% due to wage redefinition
  • Safety mechanisms and inspection safeguards removed from workplace laws
2 min read

Congress slams new labour codes, calls them 'anti-worker', launches nationwide protest

Congress intensifies nationwide protests against new labour codes, calling them draconian and warning of 50% salary cuts for India's 44 crore unorganised workers.

"A worker's actual salary will shrink by nearly 50 per cent. This is extremely dangerous. - Udit Raj"

New Delhi, Nov 27

The Congress on Thursday intensified its attack on the Centre over the recently implemented labour codes, calling them “draconian” and a direct assault on India’s 44 crore unorganised workers.

Addressing a press briefing at AICC headquarters, former MP and Chairman of the Unorganised Workers and Employees Congress (KKC), Udit Raj, said massive protests have already begun across the country and will continue in the coming weeks.

The Congress leader said the four labour codes that came into force on November 21 were designed to weaken workers’ rights, dilute social security, and give unprecedented freedom to employers.

“The Congress strongly opposes these new labour codes. Everywhere in the country, protests have begun. On November 22, we held a demonstration at Shram Shakti Bhawan and told the government that these laws are anti-worker,” he said.

He criticised provisions allowing employers to hire and fire workers without prior permission up to 300 employees—an increase from the earlier limit of 100.

He said redefining the concept of wages will drastically reduce workers’ take-home salaries, while pay revision has now been stretched to five years despite rising inflation. “A worker’s actual salary will shrink by nearly 50 per cent. This is extremely dangerous,” he added.

He also warned that safety mechanisms under occupational health and hazard laws have been weakened, leaving workers exposed to exploitation.

“Inspection and regulatory safeguards have been removed. Employers are no longer obligated to provide safety equipment or ensure workplace protection,” he said.

He criticised the central government for offering only registration benefits to gig and platform workers without social security, insurance, PF, or pension. “The welfare system for unorganised workers has been dismantled,” he said.

He demanded that the government immediately withdraw the labour codes, calling them the “most dangerous policy ever introduced for India’s workers."

- IANS

Share this article:

Reader Comments

P
Priya S
As someone working in the gig economy, this is terrifying. No PF, no pension, no insurance - just registration? What's the point? We need real security, not paperwork.
M
Michael C
While I support workers' rights, I think we need to consider that some labor reforms were necessary to attract investment. The old system wasn't perfect either.
A
Ananya R
Removing safety requirements is absolutely unacceptable! My brother works in a factory and already faces dangerous conditions. This will make it worse. 😟
S
Sarah B
The hire-and-fire provision up to 300 employees is concerning. Job security is already fragile in India. This could lead to massive exploitation of workers.
V
Vikram M
Five years for pay revision when prices are rising every month? This is completely out of touch with reality. Workers' families will suffer the most.
K
Kavya N
I appreciate Congress raising this issue, but they should have proposed concrete alternatives rather than just protests. We need balanced solutions that protect workers while supporting businesses.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50