Donald Tusk played the Grinch and decided to ruin Christmas for trade workers, said Adrian Zandberg, co-chair of the Razem party.
On Wednesday, the Sejm adopted an amendment to the Public Holidays Law, which introduces a free Christmas Eve and at the same time a third commercial Sunday in December.
403 MPs voted in favor of changes to the law, 10 were against and 12 abstained. The new regulation should enter into force next year.
Zandberg: I can’t congratulate Tusk. He played Grinch
Adrian Zandberg said in Polsat News on Saturday that “a free Christmas Eve is great and we should have had it a long time ago.” – But there is someone I cannot congratulate in this matter: Donald Tusk, who played the Grinch and decided to spoil Christmas for trade workers – he said.
According to him, an extra shopping Sunday before Christmas is “unfair” to employees in this sector. At the same time, he expressed his belief that those who worked in the trade, among others, had suffered “damage”. because some PiS MPs did not participate in the vote on the amendment proposed by Razem.
– Why were trade workers harmed? Because 15 PiS MPs, instead of going to the polls and voting for the Razem Party’s amendment that protected trade workers, had other things to do, Zandberg said.
According to him, “it was possible to defeat PO and drown out the Liberals.”
Christmas Eve is free, but not this year. There will be a third trading Sunday in December
The left has submitted a bill to introduce an extra day off on December 24. The first reading took place last week in the Sejm, after which the project was referred to the Committee on Social Policy and Family and the Committee on Economy and Development for further work. During the work of the committees, a provision was introduced regarding the third trading Sunday in December.
This year we will do our shopping on Sunday, December 15 and 22.
Source: Do Rzeczy
Roy Brown is a renowned economist and author at The Nation View. He has a deep understanding of the global economy and its intricacies. He writes about a wide range of economic topics, including monetary policy, fiscal policy, international trade, and labor markets.