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Brazil's Parliament Is Stuck In Campaign Mode. One Leader Wants To Get Back To Work
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Hugo Motta, the soft-spoken president of Brazil's Chamber of Deputies, used a regional rule-of-law forum in Buenos Aires to deliver a blunt message: Brasília has slipped into permanent campaign mode, and the country's legislative engine is stalling.
With the 2026 presidential race already casting a long shadow, daily debates increasingly orbit two poles-an incumbent president preparing his reelection bid and his chief rival entangled in court-leaving little oxygen for practical lawmaking.
Motta's pitch is disarmingly simple: stop performing for the cameras and move bills that touch people's lives. His shortlist is the kind of nuts-and-bolts agenda international investors, expats, and businesses watch closely.
First, a modern framework for concessions and public-private partnerships to unlock roads, ports, power lines, and sanitation projects.
Second, an overdue update to environmental licensing to reduce uncertainty without lowering safeguards-so companies can plan timelines and budgets with fewer surprises.
Third, clear rules for artificial intelligence to give government and industry a stable playbook. And at the center of it all, a public-security package that tightens tools against organized crime, reflecting widespread concern over gang dominance in parts of Brazil 's territory.
Brazil's Congress faces test between pragmatism and political theater
The resistance is real. Prominent legal voices caution that redefining gang crimes could be more symbolic than effective, and allies of the government warn against“criminalizing poverty.”
But Motta argues that the greater risk is drift: when Congress trades compromise for theater, major works stall, financing gets pricier, and basic services lag. External friction-like new trade measures affecting Brazil's farm exports -adds pressure to act, not posture.
Behind the story is a political system testing whether it can still deliver amid polarization. Motta is betting that a workmanlike agenda-concessions, licensing, digital rules, tougher anti-crime tools-can build cross-bench majorities even in a noisy season.
The wager matters far beyond Brasília. For expats and foreign readers, this is the difference between a Brazil that spends the next year passing bankable projects and predictable rules-or one that drifts while costs rise and security frays.
The question now is whether congressional leaders can mute the rally chants long enough to pass pragmatic laws. If they do, expect shovels in the ground, clearer guidance for tech, and firmer policing. If they don't, the“real Brazil” keeps waiting while the campaign never ends.
With the 2026 presidential race already casting a long shadow, daily debates increasingly orbit two poles-an incumbent president preparing his reelection bid and his chief rival entangled in court-leaving little oxygen for practical lawmaking.
Motta's pitch is disarmingly simple: stop performing for the cameras and move bills that touch people's lives. His shortlist is the kind of nuts-and-bolts agenda international investors, expats, and businesses watch closely.
First, a modern framework for concessions and public-private partnerships to unlock roads, ports, power lines, and sanitation projects.
Second, an overdue update to environmental licensing to reduce uncertainty without lowering safeguards-so companies can plan timelines and budgets with fewer surprises.
Third, clear rules for artificial intelligence to give government and industry a stable playbook. And at the center of it all, a public-security package that tightens tools against organized crime, reflecting widespread concern over gang dominance in parts of Brazil 's territory.
Brazil's Congress faces test between pragmatism and political theater
The resistance is real. Prominent legal voices caution that redefining gang crimes could be more symbolic than effective, and allies of the government warn against“criminalizing poverty.”
But Motta argues that the greater risk is drift: when Congress trades compromise for theater, major works stall, financing gets pricier, and basic services lag. External friction-like new trade measures affecting Brazil's farm exports -adds pressure to act, not posture.
Behind the story is a political system testing whether it can still deliver amid polarization. Motta is betting that a workmanlike agenda-concessions, licensing, digital rules, tougher anti-crime tools-can build cross-bench majorities even in a noisy season.
The wager matters far beyond Brasília. For expats and foreign readers, this is the difference between a Brazil that spends the next year passing bankable projects and predictable rules-or one that drifts while costs rise and security frays.
The question now is whether congressional leaders can mute the rally chants long enough to pass pragmatic laws. If they do, expect shovels in the ground, clearer guidance for tech, and firmer policing. If they don't, the“real Brazil” keeps waiting while the campaign never ends.
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