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Brazil’s Congress Restores Shield Against Lawmaker Prosecution

By Date,MENAFN

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Brazil's Congress Restores Shield Against Lawmaker Prosecution

(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Brazil’s lower house passed the Shielding Amendment on September 16, 2025, requiring Congress’s approval before the Supreme Court may prosecute or detain any deputy or senator.

Deputies voted 353–134 in the first round and 344–133 in the second. Lawmakers struck a secret‐ballot clause, so each decision remains public.

The amendment revives a 1988 rule scrapped in 2001 after popular pressure. Back then, legislators blocked at least 224 court requests, stalling every single case.

Restoring this barrier now risks repeating two decades of delayed accountability. Under the new text, deputies and senators keep immunity for speeches and votes, but courts must pause criminal charges until legislators consent.

It also restricts arrests to crimes explicitly non‐bailable by law and extends special Supreme Court jurisdiction to party presidents. Supporters claim the measure defends parliamentary autonomy and curbs judicial overreach.

They point to recent court orders targeting political figures and legislative sessions interrupted by protests. Critics counter that it undermines judicial checks and could shield corrupt officials from timely trial.

Many democracies grant lawmakers limited immunity, but Brazil’s amendment goes further than peers such as France, Italy, and Spain. Brazil’s measure grants a rare collective legislative veto over prosecutions, risking stalled investigations as before 2001.

Although public‐sector corruption appears widespread, vesting final prosecutorial power in lawmakers themselves strays from global norms and may erode checks and balances. This amendment marks a major shift in Brazil ‘s separation of powers.

Businesses and foreign investors should note how it may slow high‐profile corruption probes. International observers must track the Senate vote to gauge its final impact on Brazil’s rule of law and global standing.

Summary: Brazil’s Shielding Amendment revives sweeping congressional veto power over judicial actions against lawmakers, diverging sharply from other democracies and threatening to stall corruption investigations and weaken institutional oversight.