President Lula announces full veto of dosimetry bill at Palácio do Planalto event on January 8 anniversary, with inset of São Paulo opposition rally clashes.
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Lula Announces Full Veto of Dosimetry Bill on January 8 Anniversary Amid Fierce Opposition Reaction

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On the third anniversary of the January 8, 2023, attacks, President Lula fully vetoed the dosimetry bill at a Palácio do Planalto event, confirming earlier indications and rejecting penalty reductions for convicts including Jair Bolsonaro. Opposition vows to override, while a São Paulo rally against the bill saw clashes.

Marking three years since the antidemocratic assaults on Brazil's Three Powers in Brasília, President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva announced Thursday a complete veto of the Congress-approved dosimetry bill, which aimed to adjust penalty calculations by not summing sentences for related crimes like coup d'état and violent abolition of the rule of law. The measure would have primarily benefited former President Jair Bolsonaro, sentenced to 27 years and three months for leading the criminal organization behind the acts.

Lula justified the veto in a speech, lauding the STF: “Perhaps the most compelling proof of Brazil's democratic vigor is the STF's trial of the coup plotters. They all had full right to defense, judged with transparency and impartiality.”

Opposition erupted in response. Deputy Nikolas Ferreira (PL-MG) decried the convictions as an “injustice” and pledged to overturn the veto: “I actively worked to approve the amnesty bill's urgency... Now Lula vetoes it, and I have no doubt we will overturn this veto in Congress.” Senator Hamilton Mourão (Republicanos) labeled Lula “vindictive,” disregarding congressional support. Deputy Paulinho da Força (Solidariedade-SP) added: “Congress handed Lula the white flag of peace for Brazil. What did he do? Tore it and set it on fire.”

Government sources anticipate a possible override but focus on alliances with congressional leaders like Hugo Motta and Davi Alcolumbre, absent from the event. In São Paulo, a USP rally opposing the bill turned violent, involving former deputy Douglas Garcia and councilor Rubinho Nunes, with chants of “no amnesty.”

Overall, 1,734 individuals were indicted by the PGR for January 8, 810 convicted—including generals like Augusto Heleno and former minister Anderson Torres—with 346 cases pending, many targeting financiers.

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Reactions on X to President Lula's full veto of the dosimetry bill on the third anniversary of the January 8, 2023 attacks are sharply divided. Supporters, including left-wing politicians and activists, hailed it as a victory for democracy and rejection of amnesty for coup participants. Critics from the opposition labeled it vengeful and politically timed, vowing to override the veto and proposing an amnesty bill. Media outlets reported the event neutrally amid mentions of São Paulo rally clashes.

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Dramatic scene of Brazilian Senate approving Dosimetria Bill, senators celebrating amid President Lula's veto threat, with symbolic references to Bolsonaro and January 8 events.
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Senate Approves Dosimetria Bill After Chamber Passage, Prompting Lula Veto Threat

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Following the Chamber's approval a week earlier, Brazil's Senate passed the Dosimetria Bill on December 17, 2025, potentially easing sentences for Jair Bolsonaro and January 8, 2023, convicts. President Lula's administration announced a veto, calling it a threat to democracy, while opposition leaders vowed to override it.

President Lula will formally announce his veto of the Dosimetria Bill—previously passed by Congress to ease penalties for Jair Bolsonaro and January 8 convicts—at a January 8, 2026, event marking the coup attacks' third anniversary. Planalto sources say allies, not the Executive, would challenge any congressional override in the STF.

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In the early hours of December 10, 2025, Brazil's Chamber of Deputies approved the Dosimetry Bill by 291 to 148 votes, reducing sentences for those convicted in the January 8, 2023 coup plot, benefiting former President Jair Bolsonaro. The session was chaotic, including the six-month suspension of Deputy Glauber Braga's mandate instead of expulsion. The bill now heads to the Senate, where the government seeks to delay it.

Brazil's STF First Panel unanimously confirmed on Tuesday (25) Minister Alexandre de Moraes' decisions ordering the final judgment and immediate serving of sentences for the central nucleus of the coup plot. Jair Bolsonaro was sentenced to 27 years and 3 months in prison and will remain detained at the Federal Police Superintendency in Brasília. Other defendants, including former ministers and an admiral, also had arrests ordered.

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Left leaders at the Avenida Paulista rally divided over direct confrontation with Congress and insults to Chamber President Hugo Motta. Most deputies and ministers viewed the strategy as counterproductive, while activists were more vehement. The protest targeted the vote on a bill reducing penalties for coup plotters.

In a turnaround at the Chamber of Deputies, Deputy Glauber Braga's (PSOL-RJ) mandate was suspended for six months instead of being revoked, on Wednesday (10). The decision followed government and allies' articulation, who expected full loss of office for assaulting an MBL militant. The punishment avoids ineligibility and was approved 318 to 141.

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The federal police issued a statement criticizing deputy guilherme derrite's changes to the anti-faction bill, stating they weaken the fight against organized crime. Chamber president hugo motta mediated talks to preserve pf's roles. The lula government views the alterations as an attack on the agency and seeks to delay the vote.

 

 

 

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