
403
Sorry!!
Error! We're sorry, but the page you were looking for doesn't exist.
Lula's Supreme Court Pick Could Recast Brazil's Legal Machine-And Its Investment Climate
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) A surprise early retirement by Supreme Federal Court justice Luís Roberto Barroso has set off a two-step power shuffle in Brasília: who gets the Court seat now, and who runs the federal government's legal machine if that choice cascades.
Front story: Attorney General of the Union Jorge Messias is widely seen as the favorite for the Supreme Court. If he moves, President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva will pick a new chief for the Advocacia-Geral da União (AGU), the office that defends the Union and shapes litigation strategy across ministries.
Two career technocrats top the internal list: Anelise Lenzi Ruas de Almeida, who leads the National Treasury Attorney's Office (PGFN), and Adriana Maia Venturini, who heads the Federal Attorney's Office (PGF).
The story behind the story: Lula has tended to reserve Supreme Court nominations for trusted confidants, while elevating more women to other top benches.
Naming Messias to the Court and a woman to the AGU would both answer criticism about gender balance and cultivate a future Supreme Court contender from inside government.
The AGU has been a launchpad before: Gilmar Mendes, Dias Toffoli, and André Mendonça all ran it en route to the Court.
Why Almeida and Venturini matter: under their watch, the government racked up recent wins that protected public finances-upholding a cap on education deductions in personal income tax and confirming that PIS/Cofins levies count in the payroll-tax base.
Brazil's Supreme Court Shuffle Could Redefine Fiscal Stability
Reversal of the“revisão da vida toda” pension theory avoided up to R$500 billion ($94.34 billion). Broader STF tax-case victories were tallied in the hundreds of billions of reais, including roughly R$173 billion ($32.64 billion) and R$115 billion ($21.70 billion) swings on closely watched disputes.
What happens next: the president nominates, the Senate holds a hearing and votes, and the nominee takes office. But politics-Senate math, fiscal priorities, and coalition pressures-will shape the pick.
If Lula wins a new term, more mandatory retirements in 2028–2030 mean today's moves help define the Court for years.
Why this matters beyond Brazil: the Supreme Court and AGU set the tone for tax, pension, and regulatory cases that drive investment risk, corporate costs, and the predictability of rules.
In plain terms: this shuffle will influence how quickly big disputes get settled and how stable Brazil's business environment feels to outsiders and locals alike.
Front story: Attorney General of the Union Jorge Messias is widely seen as the favorite for the Supreme Court. If he moves, President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva will pick a new chief for the Advocacia-Geral da União (AGU), the office that defends the Union and shapes litigation strategy across ministries.
Two career technocrats top the internal list: Anelise Lenzi Ruas de Almeida, who leads the National Treasury Attorney's Office (PGFN), and Adriana Maia Venturini, who heads the Federal Attorney's Office (PGF).
The story behind the story: Lula has tended to reserve Supreme Court nominations for trusted confidants, while elevating more women to other top benches.
Naming Messias to the Court and a woman to the AGU would both answer criticism about gender balance and cultivate a future Supreme Court contender from inside government.
The AGU has been a launchpad before: Gilmar Mendes, Dias Toffoli, and André Mendonça all ran it en route to the Court.
Why Almeida and Venturini matter: under their watch, the government racked up recent wins that protected public finances-upholding a cap on education deductions in personal income tax and confirming that PIS/Cofins levies count in the payroll-tax base.
Brazil's Supreme Court Shuffle Could Redefine Fiscal Stability
Reversal of the“revisão da vida toda” pension theory avoided up to R$500 billion ($94.34 billion). Broader STF tax-case victories were tallied in the hundreds of billions of reais, including roughly R$173 billion ($32.64 billion) and R$115 billion ($21.70 billion) swings on closely watched disputes.
What happens next: the president nominates, the Senate holds a hearing and votes, and the nominee takes office. But politics-Senate math, fiscal priorities, and coalition pressures-will shape the pick.
If Lula wins a new term, more mandatory retirements in 2028–2030 mean today's moves help define the Court for years.
Why this matters beyond Brazil: the Supreme Court and AGU set the tone for tax, pension, and regulatory cases that drive investment risk, corporate costs, and the predictability of rules.
In plain terms: this shuffle will influence how quickly big disputes get settled and how stable Brazil's business environment feels to outsiders and locals alike.

Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the
information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept
any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images,
videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information
contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright
issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.
Most popular stories
Market Research

- Casper Network Advances Regulated Tokenization With ERC-3643 Standard
- Forex Expo Dubai Wins Guinness World Recordstm With 20,021 Visitors
- Superiorstar Prosperity Group Russell Hawthorne Highlights New Machine Learning Risk Framework
- Freedom Holding Corp. (FRHC) Shares Included In The Motley Fool's TMF Moneyball Portfolio
- Versus Trade Launches Master IB Program: Multi-Tier Commission Structure
- Ozzy Tyres Grows Their Monsta Terrain Gripper Tyres Performing In Australian Summers
Comments
No comment