Government backs off support for delivery and ride app regulation

Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva's government has withdrawn support for a bill regulating deliveries and rides via apps like iFood and Uber, jeopardizing the vote in the Chamber of Deputies scheduled for next week. Deputy Augusto Coutinho's new report removes the minimum fee per trip and proposes a basic pay of R$ 8.50 for deliverers. The move follows negative fallout at the Planalto.

The Planalto identified backlash against the new report by Deputy Augusto Coutinho (Republicanos-PE) for PLP 152/25. The text drops the minimum fee per trip for drivers and offers deliverers a basic pay of R$ 8.50 or hourly wages, diverging from the government's original demands.

Government leaders, including PT's Pedro Uczai (SC), had signaled support with amendments on April 8 but backed off amid poor reception. Guilherme Boulos, from the General Secretariat of the Presidency, criticized the version on social media, insisting on a R$ 10 minimum fee, night and 13th salary additions, and objecting to the shift to 'intermediated autonomous work' from 'labor relations'.

Some government allies advocate sticking with support, noting Chamber President Hugo Motta (Republicanos-PB) plans to schedule it. Opposition and centrão leaders consider backing it to pressure the government, while affected companies expect to defend approval as more reasonable.

Per the schedule, the report heads to the special commission on Tuesday and the plenary on Wednesday.

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Brazilian Deputy Augusto Coutinho requests postponement of app work regulation bill vote in Congress, amid protests by delivery workers and drivers.
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Lawmaker requests postponement of app work regulation bill vote

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The rapporteur of PLP 152/2025, Deputy Augusto Coutinho (Republicanos-PE), requested the postponement of the vote on the bill regulating app-based work, scheduled for Tuesday (April 14) in the Chamber's special committee. The request followed a government plea from then-leader José Guimarães (PT-CE). The government withdrew support due to rejection by delivery workers and drivers.

Presidency's General Secretariat Minister Guilherme Boulos announced on Tuesday (24) a set of actions to change relations between digital transport and delivery platforms and their workers. Measures include payment transparency requirements and support points creation. The announcement addresses demands for better working conditions.

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After an assembly on March 19, 2026, truck drivers decided to suspend the planned strike but remain in a state of strike. They will meet with Minister Guilherme Boulos on March 25 in Brasília to discuss demands. The government issued an MP to reinforce the minimum freight rate.

On Labor Day, Lula government ministers called for societal mobilization to pressure Congress to vote on ending the 6x1 schedule. Rallies in São Paulo and Rio gathered workers, unions, and politicians advocating for a 40-hour weekly cap. Chamber president Hugo Motta sped up proceedings by scheduling extra sessions.

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Protesters gathered on Avenida Paulista on Monday (25) to demand an end to the 6x1 work schedule and a reduction in the weekly workload from 44 to 40 hours without pay cuts.

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