Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Brazil's Power Struggle Moves Inside Congress


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points

  • Brazil's lower house is weighing whether to expel four lawmakers at once.
  • Congress is also debating a bill that could slash coup-related prison terms.
  • The decisions will show if Brazil enforces rules or shields powerful allies.

    If you live outside Brazil, it is tempting to see Jair Bolsonaro's arrest as the end of a long drama. In reality, a quieter battle has moved inside Congress, where rules and careers are being renegotiated.

    At the centre is Hugo Motta, the young president of the Chamber of Deputies. He has put four deputies on a fast track to possible expulsion: Carla Zambelli, Glauber Braga, Eduardo Bolsonaro and Alexandre Ramagem.

    Their cases are different but all raise the same question: where does democratic behaviour end and abuse of power begin?

    Zambelli, a Bolsonaro ally, is accused over an armed chase through São Paulo during the 2022 campaign and for helping feed protests that questioned the election.

    Braga, a loud critic of the political system from the opposite flank, faces punishment for physical confrontations and constant attacks on the institution. They show how Brazil's most aggressive voices on both sides turned politics into a permanent street fight.


    Discipline Fight or Disguised Amnesty?
    Eduardo Bolsonaro's problem is simpler and more embarrassing: he has skipped sessions while spending long stretches abroad, testing how far a famous name can stretch the rules.

    Ramagem's case goes deeper, into allegations that Brazil's intelligence agency was used as a private tool to watch judges and rivals when he ran it.

    Layered on top of all this is the“PL da Dosimetria”, a bill that revisits how harshly people are sentenced for crimes against democracy.

    On paper it is about technical fairness. In practice it could sharply reduce the 27-year prison term that Bolsonaro now faces and shorten sentences for organisers and foot soldiers of the 8 January unrest.

    For expats and diplomats, the message matters more than the legal jargon. If Congress enforces discipline while resisting disguised amnesties, Brazil will look like a country learning from crisis.

    If it protects favourites and rewrites punishments after the fact, it will look like a system still unwilling to defend its own rules when it really counts.

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  • The Rio Times

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