Four days after the Supreme Federal Court's 9-1 decision declaring the temporal framework unconstitutional, a federal deputy from PL-MS and president of the Chamber's Agriculture Commission criticized the ruling for disregarding constitutional intent and imposing insecurity on rural producers with good-faith titles. Congress had approved a law and a constitutional amendment proposal supporting the framework.
The STF's December 18, 2025, ruling (previously detailed in coverage of the judgment) invalidated the temporal framework, which limited indigenous land demarcations to areas occupied on October 5, 1988—the date the 1988 Constitution was promulgated. This criterion aimed to provide an objective cutoff amid ongoing disputes.
The deputy argues the decision ignores the Constitution's text and the original constituent assembly's intent, creating legal uncertainty. He highlights that thousands of rural producers purchased lands in good faith with valid titles post-1988. Congress passed the Temporal Framework Law following extensive debates in the Chamber and Senate, overriding a presidential veto, while a Constitutional Amendment Proposal was approved in the Senate to bolster existing provisions.
According to the deputy, the framework does not extinguish indigenous rights but introduces an objective standard for rural pacification, balancing indigenous protections with property rights and sustainable development. He stresses that the Constitution must remain the foundational pact, unaltered by passing majorities.
This ruling underscores tensions in inter-branch relations since the 1988 Constitution, which recognizes indigenous original rights to traditionally occupied lands and mandated demarcations within five years (by 1993) via Article 67 of the Transitional Provisions.