Brazil’s Referendum Fever: Congress Gets More than 300 Proposals

The Brazilian referendum on banning firearms and ammunition sales revived the debate on how to enlarge popular participation in political decision-making in Brazil.

Many lawmakers promise to work to make popular consultations a frequent phenomenon. There are 300 proposals before the National Congress for referenda and plebiscites.

The themes calling for popular consultation include the conversion of the regime into a parliamentary form of government, the São Francisco River basin integration project, the legalization of abortion, the cancellation of agreements with the International Monetary Fund (IMF), foreign debt payment, the process of privatizing state enterprises, and the creation of new states.

In the Chamber alone there are four bills calling for a plebiscite to reduce from 18 to 16 the age for treating criminal offenders as adults.

The author of one of these bills is deputy Luiz Antônio Fleury (PTB-SP), vice-president of the Parliamentary Front for the Right of Legitimate Self-Defense, the group that defended the "no" vote on ending firearms and ammunition sales.

The opinion issued by the rapporteur of the bill, deputy Luiz Eduardo Greenhalgh (PT-SP), opposed reducing the age for treating criminal offenders as adults. Greenhalgh considers the bill unconstitutional.

"Moreover, I am thoroughly convinced that the reduction for purposes of penal accountability will in no way improve the country’s crime index, nor will it contribute to the preservation of youth and adolescents and the socio-educational recovery of juvenile delinquents," the PT deputy affirms in his opinion.

"In Spain, recently, the government was obliged to revise this question, restoring the penal age, which had previously been lowered to 14, to 18."

In his bill in favor of lowering the age of penal adulthood, deputy Fleury says that "there exists a global trend to lower the age, recognizing that 16 or 17 year old minors already understand the facts of life [sufficiently] to be held responsible for their behavior."

No matter what questions are submitted to popular consultation, various specialists are in favor of expanding the number of plebiscites and referenda in Brazil.

Prior to last Sunday’s (23) referendum, only two plebiscites had been held in the country in all of Brazil’s 500-year history. One of them in 1963, to choose the political system (parliamentary or presidential), and the other in 1993, to choose the political system and regime (republican or monarchical).

In referenda, citizens express their views on laws that are already in force, while. in plebiscites, they vote on rules to be applied in the future.

Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

Nothing Will Change, Says New Brazilian Finance Czar

Brazil’s new Finance Minister Guido Mantega said that the government’s conservative economic policies will ...

Brazilian Congress Probes Corruption Charges in the Postal Service

Brazil’s Post Office CPI (Congressional Investigative Commission), which is investigating charges of corruption in ...

New York Bullish on Brazilian Stocks

Shares of Brazilian companies traded in the Nova York Stock Exchange (NYSE) also known ...

Just Rich

Brazil begins to discuss the 2002 budgets of federal, state and municipal governments much ...

Brazil Exceeds All Economic Expectations

Brazil’s macroeconomic situation is better today than what was forecast at the beginning of ...

Brazil Gets Its Own Logo

The so-called Brazil Trademark, the new symbol which will begin to represent the country’s ...

Political rally (comício) in Brazil

In Brazil, King and Wannabe Kings Are All Naked

It’s not only the king who is naked in Brazil. All the presidential candidates ...

Bolivian Indians Say They Will Cut Flow of Gas to Brazil

Guarani Indians threatened yesterday, August 28, to take control of Bolivia’s largest gas and ...

Brazil Puts the Brake on Growth to Avoid Inflation

The Selic, Brazil's reference key interest rate. will only begin to fall when inflation ...