The plenary of the Chamber will discuss 13 provisional measures proposed by the Bolsonaro government. Lula’s, on the other hand, still depend on an agreement in Congress.| Photo: Cleia Viana/Chamber of Deputies

The Chamber of Deputies begins to discuss this Monday (27) a set of 13 provisional measures issued during the government of Jair Bolsonaro (PL) amid the crisis involving presidents Arthur Lira (PP-AL) and Rodrigo Pacheco (PSD-MG). ) of the Senate. According to the announcement made by Lira last week, discussions and votes on these proposals will take place by Thursday.

The MPs sent by the government of Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva (PT) are still the subject of dispute between the two houses, due to the discussion about the rite of discussions. While deputies defend maintaining the current procedure model, with the analysis of the measures starting and being reported by the Chamber, the Senate intends to resume the format of mixed commissions, suspended during the Covid-19 pandemic.

The crisis between Lira and Pacheco took on a new tone last Friday (24), when the mayor asked for a plenary session of Congress to discuss the procedure model, a day after the Senate decreed the return of the rite provided for in the Constitution.

The discussion between the two presidents spills directly into the Lula government, which depends on the relationship in Congress to approve projects of interest and guarantee governance. For federal deputy Guilherme Boulos (PSOL-SP), from the government base, the government will enter the field to resolve the crisis involving Lira and Pacheco.

“We have been talking with Minister Alexandre Padilha (Institutional Relations), with government leader José Guimarães (PT-CE), to build an agreed solution. I hope we move forward in this dialogue this week. Even if you have to return [o rito das] mixed commissions, that it be something discussed and that there be a transitional solution for those MPs that have already been edited”, he said in an interview with GloboNews this Monday morning (27).

Among the provisional measures that may have their processing affected are some considered important by the government, such as those that implemented social programs that may end up losing effect. Last week, Lira said, in a statement, that the government could lose votes if it does not support it in maintaining the current procedure.