The mayor, (-AL), has not yet made official the creation of the working group that will discuss the , .
On the 28th, Lira withdrew the project from the CCJ (Constitution and Justice Commission), and announced the creation of a special commission. In practice, the project discussion will start again from scratch.
The rite provides that the president of the Chamber will officiate the party leaders so that each party can nominate their representatives on the special commission — which has not happened so far. From the moment that more than half of the members are nominated, it will be up to Lira to call a meeting to establish the collegiate and elect its president.
The commission will have 34 full members and 34 substitutes. It has a term of up to 40 plenary sessions, and may end before that. After the discussion in the collegiate, the proposal goes to the House plenary.
Lira’s objective with the special committee was to create the bill and still get support from PT and PL (the two largest parties in the Chamber) around .
On the one hand, the PL wanted a commitment from the future president that the proposal would go through the House. On the other hand, the PT was completely against it and did not even want the project to be discussed in plenary.
Lira, through an advisor, did not respond to the deadline for making the commission official and starting party nominations.
Allies minimize the fact that the commission has not yet been made official and say that in recent days the mayor and .
They also say that, this week, Lira’s focus was on the P20, a meeting of the presidents of Parliaments of the countries in the Chamber.
In an interview with Sheet last week, .
. On the one hand, PT members celebrated stating that this decision removed the risk of voting on the project at this time in the CCJ — with a great chance of being approved.
They also said that the commission may not even get off the ground, as happened previously with the .
Despite this, some PT members wanted a more incisive position from the future president of the Chamber contrary to the text and viewed Lira’s initiative with suspicion, as it was a clear nod to Bolsonarists.
Parliamentarians from the PL’s Bolsonarist wing also criticized Lira’s decision, because they believed in the approval of the project at the CCJ. The president of the collegiate, Caroline de Toni (PL-SC), said that the issue is still a priority, that she is convinced that the amnesty will be approved and will work to make this happen quickly.
Bolsonaro parliamentarians are betting that the United States will give, extending the benefit to Bolsonaro himself.
Deputies from the center and the left, however, minimize the possible relationship between the Republican’s victory and the progress of the project in the House.
On Wednesday (6), it caused “greater encouragement to right-wing movements and parties” in the country, but stated that discussions on the amnesty proposal will take place within the scope of the special commission.
“The conduct of the commission should begin in the next few days. The commission will work, in my opinion, very calmly and doing the work that needs to be done to debate such an important topic as this,” he said.
Since he launched himself into the dispute for Lira’s succession, precisely to obtain the support of the PT and the PL.