Governor stated that those convicted of the January 8 scammer acts are ‘people who were seeing what was happening, knowing Brasilia’ on the date on which there was the invasion and depredation of the buildings of the three powers
The governor of São Paulo, (Republicans), said on Sunday (6) that amnesty is an urgent agenda because it is necessary to “pacify the country”. According to former government minister of former President Jair Bolsonaro, it is necessary to “discuss what matters.” In this area, Tarcisio cited inflation and food price to stroke his political godfather: “If it’s all expensive, Bolsonaro comes back.” Tarcisio participates, along with other governors, the act convened by the former president and his allies in defense of amnesty to the convicts of the scammers of the January 8. According to Tarcisio, amnesty is a “political, humanitarian and urgent agenda”. “We are urgent because we need to pacify Brazil. Looking forward and discussing what matters. We are losing the tram. We have to think about our growth. Why is inflation so expensive? Why are you paying dearly in the egg? And if it’s all expensive, Bolsonaro comes back.”
The governor stated that those convicted of the January 8 scammer acts are “people who were seeing what was happening, knowing Brasilia” on the date on which there was the invasion and depredation of the buildings of the three powers. “Asking amnesty is not heresy, it is fair, real and important,” he exclaimed. At the end of his speech during the act, the governor of Sao Paulo drove directly to Bolsonaro: “The Lord is missing and injustice will not prevail. I am sure that the Lord will return to bring hope to these people.” Then he asked the gifts to sing the choir “Bolsonaro”. Tarcisio said he hoped that, after this Sunday’s act, “God tap the heart of each parliamentarian about the amnesty.” The Bolsonaro PL tries to raise individual signatures from 257 deputies to be able to guide the amnesty’s urgent regime in the House of Representatives, regardless of a leader agreement.
*With information from Estadão Content
Posted by Sarah Paula