The House of Representatives on Wednesday followed the Senate and came out in favour of a fortnight’s paternity leave. It remains to be seen whether the initiators, who are demanding four weeks’ leave, will now withdraw their petition for a referendum.
Parliamentarians debated various options. Should paternity leave remain at just one day? Should it be two, four or eight weeks? What about a parental leave modelled on neighbouring and Scandinavian countries – between 28 and 52 weeks, depending on the model?
In the end, by 129 votes to 62 with one abstention, the House of Representatives voted in favour of the counterproposal to the popular initiative “For reasonable paternity leave – for the benefit of the whole family”.
The counterproposal can thus be implemented if voters reject the original initiative or if the initiative committee withdraws it.
Fathers could then take two weeks’ paid leave in the first six months after the birth of the child. Like maternity leave, this would be financed by the income replacement scheme. According to the government, estimated costs come to around CHF229 million ($231 million) a year.
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Paternity leave takes a step forward in Senate vote
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If you want to start a conversation about a topic raised in this article or want to report factual errors, email us at english@swissinfo.ch.
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Paternity leave takes a step forward in Senate vote
This content was published on
The question of paternity leave passed a first milestone in the Swiss parliament on Thursday as the Senate voted in favour of two weeks paid leave.
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Expert committee calls for 38 weeks parental leave
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In a study published on MondayExternal link, the Federal Coordination Commission for Family AffairsExternal link, recommends 14 weeks for the mother and eight weeks for the father. The remaining 16 weeks would be split between the spouses, with no obligation to take them. Such leave would be paid at 80% of salary and could be…
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