Brazilian deputies applauding the overwhelming approval of the Public Security PEC (461-14) in the Chamber of Deputies chamber at night.
Brazilian deputies applauding the overwhelming approval of the Public Security PEC (461-14) in the Chamber of Deputies chamber at night.
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Chamber approves Public Security PEC in two rounds

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Brazil's Chamber of Deputies approved the Public Security Constitutional Amendment Proposal on the night of March 4, 2026, with 461 votes in favor and 14 against in the second round. The text, which provides funding through bets and the pre-salt social fund, heads to the Senate after negotiations that removed a plebiscite on reducing the age of criminal majority. The approval reflects dialogue between the government, the rapporteur, and the House president.

Brazil's Chamber of Deputies approved the Public Security PEC in two rounds on the night of March 4, 2026. In the first round, it received 487 votes in favor, 15 against, and one abstention; in the second, 461 in favor and 14 against. The text now proceeds to the Senate for review.

Rapporteur Deputy Mendonça Filho (União-PE) was persuaded by Chamber President Hugo Motta (Republicanos-PB) to remove a referendum on reducing the age of criminal majority from the proposal to avoid rejection in the Senate. “We recognized that President Hugo's proposal is valid. We could not jeopardize all the work done so far. The PEC could be approved here, but it would die in the Federal Senate,” said Mendonça Filho.

Hugo Motta emphasized dialogue as key to approval: “Violence is, according to Brazilians themselves, the country's biggest problem. And today this house delivers a firm response to the growing criminality.”

Key provisions include constitutionalizing the Unified Public Security System (Susp), expanding Federal Police powers to investigate militias and criminal organizations, allowing municipal police creation from civil guards, and including socio-educational agents in the system. For funding, it allocates 30% of betting revenues to the National Public Security Fund and National Penitentiary Fund after deductions, expecting R$500 million to R$1.5 billion annually. It also allocates 10% of the pre-salt social fund surplus to security funds, gradually starting in 2027, potentially generating R$6 to 8 billion by 2029.

The text authorizes laws for harsher sanctions against high-danger criminal organizations, including factions and militias, and crimes against women, children, and adolescents. It prohibits budgetary blocks on funds and ensures 50% transfers to states and municipalities.

The 14 deputies who voted against in the second round were mostly from PSOL: Capitão Augusto (PL-SP), Célia Xakriabá (PSOL-MG), Chico Alencar (PSOL-RJ), Erika Hilton (PSOL-SP), Fernanda Melchionna (PSOL-RS), Heloísa Helena (Rede-RJ), Ivan Valente (PSOL-SP), Juliana Cardoso (PT-SP), Luiza Erundina (PSOL-SP), Pastor Henrique Vieira (PSOL-RJ), Professora Luciene (PSOL-SP), Sâmia Bomfim (PSOL-SP), Tarcísio Motta (PSOL-RJ), and Túlio Gadêlha (Rede-PE).

Opposition leader Cabo Gilberto Silva (PL-PB) viewed the PEC as progress but insufficient for demands like a national police salary floor. Government leader José Guimarães (PT-PE) celebrated: “This proposal from our government is one that today is consecrated as victorious and is the fruit of the President's courage.”

사람들이 말하는 것

Discussions on X about the Chamber's approval of the Public Security PEC reflect broad support for enhanced security funding via bets and pre-salt funds, with positive reactions from government allies and right-wing figures emphasizing integration and crime-fighting. PSOL expressed strong opposition, criticizing distortions that threaten rights, enable militias, and undermine judicial roles. Skepticism emerged over police municipalization and the removal of the plebiscite on reducing criminal majority age. High-engagement posts noted the lopsided votes (461-14 in second round) and listed dissenters.

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Brazilian deputies celebrate first-round approval of SUAS funding bill PEC 383/17 in the Chamber of Deputies.
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Brazil's Chamber of Deputies approves SUAS funding PEC in first round

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Brazil's Chamber of Deputies approved PEC 383/17 in first round on Wednesday (April 8), setting a 1% floor of net current revenue for the Unified Social Assistance System (SUAS). The bill still requires a second round in the Chamber and Senate review. It includes a gradual rollout for the federal government and immediate allocation for states and municipalities.

Brazil's Chamber of Deputies is set to vote on Wednesday (March 4) on the Public Security PEC, but faces government resistance to including the reduction of the age of criminal majority to 16 years. Relator Mendonça Filho proposes a 2028 plebiscite on the issue, dividing the allied base and opposition. The Lula government opposes the measure, prioritizing focus on organizing the security system.

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Brazil's Chamber of Deputies approved the Anti-Faction Bill (PL 5582/25) on the night of February 24, toughening penalties against criminal organizations and militias. Authored by the executive branch, the bill now heads to President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva for sanction after Senate amendments. The symbolic vote removed the proposed taxation on online bets.

Brazil's Parliamentary Commission of Inquiry (CPI) on Organized Crime rejected Senator Alessandro Vieira's (MDB-SE) final report on Tuesday (April 14), which proposed indicting three Supreme Federal Court (STF) justices and the Attorney General. The report was defeated 6-4 after changes in the commission's composition. The substitutions favored government-aligned members, swaying the vote outcome.

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Justice and Public Security Minister Wellington César Lima e Silva has invited Piauí's Public Security Secretary Francisco Lucas Costa Veloso, known as Chico Lucas, to lead the National Public Security Secretariat. The announcement is expected this week. Lucas is a trusted figure of Governor Rafael Fonteles and was requested by the National Council of Public Security Secretaries.

On Tuesday, Interior Secretary Rosa Icela Rodríguez presented the Plan B electoral reform initiative on President Claudia Sheinbaum's instructions. It aims to cut privileges and spending in electoral bodies and local governments after the original constitutional proposal failed in the Chamber of Deputies. It will be sent to the Senate with PT and PVEM support.

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Centrist leaders in Brazil's lower house want to avoid voting on a bill regulating extra perks and supersalaries for public servants unless President Lula's government engages directly. The Supreme Federal Court suspended these benefits and ordered Congress to legislate within 60 days, but the deadline is deemed too short in an election year. The STF plenary is judging the decisions this week.

 

 

 

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