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Colombia's Petro has threatened to implement a referendum on labor reform as the deadline for the Congress looms.

The leftist president of Colombia, Gustavo Petro, signed a decree on Wednesday to hold a vote on labor reforms. This was an attempt to get the Senate to take a vote on this issue before the session ends later in the month.

The referendum proposal seeks a limit on the number of hours that can be worked in a day, an increase in the surcharge from 75% to 100% for work done on Sundays and holidays and the requirement for drivers to pay social security contributions.

The Senate is debating the modified reform of labor after rejecting in May a 12-question referendum version in a close 49-47 vote. Petro claimed that this vote was fraudulent.

The current legislative session ends on 20 June.

Petro and his Interior Minister, Armando Benedetto, stated that the referendum will be cancelled if the reform passes.

To be valid, each measure must be approved by a majority of 13.5 million voters - a third the Colombian electoral roll - in order to hold if voted on.

The opposition parties claim that Petro's decree amounts to a coup and violates Colombia's Constitution. It also destroys the separation between the three branches of the government.

Analysts warn that, in the meantime, the decree may face legal challenges including at the Constitutional Court.

The majority of social and economic reforms promised to Petro, who was elected 2022 on promises to end centuries of inequality in Andean countries, have been rejected by legislators.

Colombia will hold presidential and legislative elections in the first six months of 2026. (Reporting and writing by Carlos Vargas, Nelson Bocanegra and Natalia Siniawski. Editing and reviewing by Gabriel Araujo and Kyra Madry.

(source: Reuters)