House and Senate have a history of occupations and pressures – 11/08/2025 – Power

by Andrea
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While the opposition obstructed the vote in the plenary of the screams and slogans, governors classified the protest as a riot. The protest was motivated by the former president’s arrest-the year was 2018, and the imprisonment was ().

What took the House and last week because of the former president’s house arrest () adds to other movements that paralyzed the plenary in historical times of crisis. From left to right, the manifestations were used as a pressure instrument on the presidents of the houses.

On Thursday (7), the day after the plenary resumption, the mayor, (-PB), said the riot “was a tension that, I believe, the house did not live in its recent history.”

The scholarship occupation made work in the House unfeasible for more than 30 hours, and almost Motta cannot resume the chair of the presidency. These contours bring, as the house’s own president said, a certain unprecedented, despite the coincidences with recent episodes.

The petista obstruction in April 2018 forced the then president of the House, Rodrigo Maia, to postpone the next day the vote of a project on public safety. The act lasted just over three hours.

At that moment, the plenary was divided between shouts of “Lula Livre” and “Lula Thief”. Last Wednesday (6), the clash took place between “amnesty already” and “without amnesty”, while deputies and reach the table.

But not only prisons caused the command of the houses. The vote on labor reform in 2017 also generated emblematic images.

In the Senate, leftist senators, including the today Minister (PT), prevented the then president of the house, Eunício Oliveira, from sitting at the table. They occupied the site for more than seven hours in July of that year.

After spending more than ten minutes unable to occupy the chair of president, Eunício Oliveira took the microphone and ended the session, and the lights, off.

“The session is closed and there is no sound until I sit in the presidency of the table,” he said. Annoyed, he left the plenary saying that “even in the dictatorship it was done.”

The senators remained at the scene, right in the dark, and fed on the table on the table itself.

Today on the other side of the game, the PT criticized the pocket riot. Party leader (RJ) said the protest was an attack on democracy, a continuation of January 8, a blackmail and a kind of parliamentary AI-5.

Still in 2017, in April of that year, OE was starring the deputy (-SP), who climbed to the table with other colleagues with posters where the work card appeared torn.

Later, the session was. The then deputy Assis Melo (B-RS PC) was prevented from speaking because he was dressed as a worker, with white jumpsuit, welder mask and gloves.

“You will only talk about the plenary who is dressed according to the customs of the house,” said then -President Maia, who read a resolution that indicated the “full ride” costume.

Erundina also symbolized another stoppage, this time the target was the then mayor, who had commanded the authorization to (PT).

It was April 2016. The session was suspended for a few hours after the plenary, making the speech of other parliamentarians unfeasible.
Cunha left the plenary and called a meeting of leaders. Erundina then sat in the chair of the president. The session was resumed and ended at dawn.

Senate’s own president, (-AP), who last week had to end the Bolsonarist riot in the house, in the vote that elected him president.

Alcolumbre faced jokes that he was using a “geriatric diaper” to endure so long sitting in the same place. The note was made by colleague Jorge Kajuru (PSB-GO).

A and ended up postponed. At one point, the then senator went to the table and took the paste from the work. The movement, and the session was compared to the São Paulo Carnival investigation of 2012, when a member of the Empire Casa Verde samba school broke into the judges’ table and stole and tore the calculation notes.

Alcolumbre opponent in the vote, Renan Calheiros (MDB-AL) left and the session accusing the rival of authoritarianism. Last week, it was Alcolumbre’s turn to call the pockets action “arbitrary” and alien to “democratic principles.”

On Wednesday, Senator Magno Malta (PL-ES) even sought to the Board of Directors. Again, something that is not unheard of in Congress.

In October 2015, eight protesters in the Pilasters of the House Green Hall to press Cunha to accept the impeachment of Dilma Rousseff. The protest leader was (PL-SP), who was elected deputy in 2018 and.

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