Congress And Supreme Court Lock Horns As Bolsonaro Case Deepens Power Struggle
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Brazil's Supreme Federal Court (STF) is not stepping out of politics after Jair Bolsonaro's coup-plot trial. Even if the First Panel delivers a verdict soon, official dockets show at least seven other cases against the former president remain active.
These include the“digital militias” inquiry into coordinated attacks on institutions, the Saudi jewels case, and obstruction allegations involving his son Eduardo.
Federal Police records confirm Bolsonaro and 36 others face indictment for crimes such as coup attempt and criminal conspiracy. Congress, however, is not staying quiet.
Senate records show lawmakers already approved a constitutional amendment to limit the power of single-justice decisions, a tool the Court has used hundreds of times in recent years.
The Chamber of Deputies now decides whether to move the proposal forward. If adopted, it would reduce the ability of one minister to suspend laws or government measures, a change with direct impact on Brazil's legal and economic predictability.
At the same time, deputies debate bills to grant amnesty to those sentenced for the January 8 attacks. Legislative files list proposals like PL 1815/2025 and PL 1983/2025.
Opposition leaders want the Speaker to schedule a vote, but official statements show he insists on consulting party leaders first. Senate leaders, on record, resist a blanket amnesty.
These bills matter because they could shorten prison terms, cut legal costs, and shift the balance of accountability for political violence. The fight goes beyond Bolsonaro. Court data shows decisions striking down or suspending acts of Congress have multiplied since 2005.
That trend fuels arguments in Congress that unelected judges hold too much sway over elected lawmakers. By contrast, the Court argues it is protecting constitutional order.
For outside observers, this clash matters because it affects how stable Brazil's rules are for business and investment. A Court with fewer emergency powers would mean fewer abrupt suspensions of tax or spending measures.
An amnesty could reshape prison rolls, reduce case volumes, and calm or inflame political tensions depending on its scope. The story behind the story is that Bolsonaro's trial is not the real endgame.
The real fight is over who sets the boundaries of power in Brazil: judges or lawmakers. The outcome will decide not only the former president's fate, but also how predictable the country's institutions remain in the run-up to the 2026 elections.
These include the“digital militias” inquiry into coordinated attacks on institutions, the Saudi jewels case, and obstruction allegations involving his son Eduardo.
Federal Police records confirm Bolsonaro and 36 others face indictment for crimes such as coup attempt and criminal conspiracy. Congress, however, is not staying quiet.
Senate records show lawmakers already approved a constitutional amendment to limit the power of single-justice decisions, a tool the Court has used hundreds of times in recent years.
The Chamber of Deputies now decides whether to move the proposal forward. If adopted, it would reduce the ability of one minister to suspend laws or government measures, a change with direct impact on Brazil's legal and economic predictability.
At the same time, deputies debate bills to grant amnesty to those sentenced for the January 8 attacks. Legislative files list proposals like PL 1815/2025 and PL 1983/2025.
Opposition leaders want the Speaker to schedule a vote, but official statements show he insists on consulting party leaders first. Senate leaders, on record, resist a blanket amnesty.
These bills matter because they could shorten prison terms, cut legal costs, and shift the balance of accountability for political violence. The fight goes beyond Bolsonaro. Court data shows decisions striking down or suspending acts of Congress have multiplied since 2005.
That trend fuels arguments in Congress that unelected judges hold too much sway over elected lawmakers. By contrast, the Court argues it is protecting constitutional order.
For outside observers, this clash matters because it affects how stable Brazil's rules are for business and investment. A Court with fewer emergency powers would mean fewer abrupt suspensions of tax or spending measures.
An amnesty could reshape prison rolls, reduce case volumes, and calm or inflame political tensions depending on its scope. The story behind the story is that Bolsonaro's trial is not the real endgame.
The real fight is over who sets the boundaries of power in Brazil: judges or lawmakers. The outcome will decide not only the former president's fate, but also how predictable the country's institutions remain in the run-up to the 2026 elections.

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