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Brazilians Reject Amnesty And Sentence Cuts For January 8 Convicts, Poll Finds
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) A new nationwide Genial/Quaest poll suggests Brazil's mood has hardened against leniency for those convicted over the January 8, 2023 rampage in Brasília, when mobs attacked the buildings of all three branches of government.
The message to Congress is straightforward: no blanket forgiveness, and no special protections for elected officials. Nearly half of respondents - 47 percent - oppose any amnesty.
Thirty-five percent favor amnesty for everyone involved, including former president Jair Bolsonaro, and 8 percent would extend it only to demonstrators.
The rest did not take a position. Skepticism also meets the so-called Dosimetry Bill, a proposal discussed with former president Michel Temer and deputy Aécio Neves to reduce sentences in January 8 cases: 52 percent oppose it, while 37 percent support it.
Voters are even more resistant to the“Shielding” constitutional amendment (PEC da Blindagem), which would curb the Supreme Court and Public Prosecutor's Office and make it harder to arrest lawmakers.
Sixty-three percent oppose the measure; just 22 percent support it. After passing the Chamber of Deputies, the proposal was shelved in the Senate on September 24 following large, highly visible street protests organized by civic groups and artists in Rio, São Paulo, and other capitals.
Public Backlash Turns Accountability Into Political Force
The story behind the story is that public pressure shifted the political weather. Organizers framed the issue not as left versus right, but as accountability versus impunity - and that framing stuck.
In the poll, 39 percent say President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva emerged stronger after the protests, compared with 30 percent who say he is weaker.
The broader signal to lawmakers is that attempts to soften punishments or insulate themselves from prosecution carry real political risk.
Why this matters to readers outside Brazil: it shows a democracy testing its guardrails after a shock event - and a public insisting on consequences for anti-democratic violence while resisting efforts to place politicians above the law. That dynamic will shape any narrower sentencing tweaks that Congress considers next.
The message to Congress is straightforward: no blanket forgiveness, and no special protections for elected officials. Nearly half of respondents - 47 percent - oppose any amnesty.
Thirty-five percent favor amnesty for everyone involved, including former president Jair Bolsonaro, and 8 percent would extend it only to demonstrators.
The rest did not take a position. Skepticism also meets the so-called Dosimetry Bill, a proposal discussed with former president Michel Temer and deputy Aécio Neves to reduce sentences in January 8 cases: 52 percent oppose it, while 37 percent support it.
Voters are even more resistant to the“Shielding” constitutional amendment (PEC da Blindagem), which would curb the Supreme Court and Public Prosecutor's Office and make it harder to arrest lawmakers.
Sixty-three percent oppose the measure; just 22 percent support it. After passing the Chamber of Deputies, the proposal was shelved in the Senate on September 24 following large, highly visible street protests organized by civic groups and artists in Rio, São Paulo, and other capitals.
Public Backlash Turns Accountability Into Political Force
The story behind the story is that public pressure shifted the political weather. Organizers framed the issue not as left versus right, but as accountability versus impunity - and that framing stuck.
In the poll, 39 percent say President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva emerged stronger after the protests, compared with 30 percent who say he is weaker.
The broader signal to lawmakers is that attempts to soften punishments or insulate themselves from prosecution carry real political risk.
Why this matters to readers outside Brazil: it shows a democracy testing its guardrails after a shock event - and a public insisting on consequences for anti-democratic violence while resisting efforts to place politicians above the law. That dynamic will shape any narrower sentencing tweaks that Congress considers next.

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