Commentator José Eduardo Cardozo and the businessman and former federal deputy Alexis Fonteyne discussed, on Wednesday (11), in The Great Debate (Monday to Friday, at 23h), what is the limit of clashes in the House of Representatives.
A House hearing with the presence of Finance Minister Fernando Haddad was closed after a chat with deputies Nikolas Ferreira (PL-MG) and Carlos Jordy (PL-RJ).
Cardozo argues that there is a formal rite of respect that is being forgotten.
“The House, in regiment, forces parliamentarians to call themselves your excellencies, why this? When you speak you are having a posture of a certain formal distance that guard you a larger aspect of respect in the dialogue,” he said.
“Unfortunately I think that, increasingly, the House of Representatives has been losing this. I see parliamentarians calling ministers of you, I see parliamentarians creating situations to just give your touch on the internet and parliamentary debate, which is one that should be done with certain formal rites of reciprocal democratic respect, turns out.”
Fonteyne understands that the debate has to revolve around ideas.
“In my opinion, when [Nikolas Ferreira e Carlos Jordy] They asked all the questions and had to withdraw to other committees, because it was a time of several committees, when they were away the minister took advantage of the moment, did not answer anything and still went to the attack, ”he said.
“The class arrived and went to be satisfied because it went to the staff, unfortunately it was no longer for the ideas, the minister had to answer the technical questions of economics and that was not what he did. He called both of them and said they wanted to ‘seal’ on the internet,” he said.