Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Lula Vetoes Sentence-Reduction Bill That Could Have Helped Bolsonaro, Raising Stakes With Congress


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points:

  • Lula struck down a Congress-approved bill meant to shorten sentences tied to January 8 and the coup-plot case.
  • The proposal changed sentence math, offered discounts for non-leaders, and sped up prison-regime progression.
  • Congress can override the veto, but the Supreme Court would likely be pulled back in.

President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva on Thursday, January 8, 2026 issued an integral veto of PL 2.162/2023, the so-called“dosimetry” bill approved by Congress late in 2025.

Supporters marketed it as an alternative to a broad amnesty for the January 8, 2023 invasions and vandalism of Brazil's presidential palace, Congress, and Supreme Court.

Lula rejected that compromise, using an anniversary ceremony at the Palácio do Planalto to defend the Supreme Court 's prosecutions as transparent and evidence-driven.

The bill's language was technical, but the effect was straightforward: less time in closed prison for many defendants.



It rewrote parts of the Penal Code and the Penal Execution Law to cap“stacking” of overlapping democratic-order crimes through a formal-concurrence rule, using the highest penalty plus only a fraction.

It also created a one-third to two-thirds reduction for offenses committed in a“crowd context,” provided the defendant neither financed nor led the acts.
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On execution, it restored a one-sixth benchmark for regime progression in many cases and clarified that serving a liberty-restricting sentence at home does not block remission credits.

Critics said those mechanics were built to soften outcomes for people already sentenced by the Supreme Court, including former president Jair Bolsonaro, widely reported as condemned to 27 years and three months in the coup-plot case.

Because the package was more lenient, it was widely debated as something that could apply retroactively. Backers argued proportionality matters after hundreds of convictions and roughly 2,000 arrests in the aftermath.

For now, existing rulings remain intact, including a minimum collective compensation of R$30 million for damage to public buildings.

Congress can still vote to override the veto in a joint session, needing 257 deputies and 41 senators. Even if lawmakers prevail, the legal fight is likely to return to the Supreme Court.

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The Rio Times

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