President signals firm stance against sentence reduction
Brazil’s president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, has pledged to veto newly approved legislation that would significantly reduce the prison term of former president Jair Bolsonaro, who was sentenced to more than 27 years for orchestrating an attempted coup following the 2022 election defeat.
The bill passed Congress late Wednesday and would shorten the minimum time Bolsonaro must serve in a closed prison regime from six years to just over two, depending on sentence reduction mechanisms such as good behavior. Lula acknowledged that Congress could override his veto but insisted accountability for crimes against democracy must prevail.
Bolsonaro sentence reduction sparks political clash
Speaking to reporters on Thursday, Lula emphasized that those who attempted to undermine Brazil’s democratic institutions must face the consequences. He described the legislative process as part of democratic checks and balances, stating that while Congress may override his decision, he will exercise his constitutional right to block the bill.
Bolsonaro is currently serving his sentence in a special cell at federal police headquarters in Brasília. His legal team is seeking authorization from the Supreme Court for him to undergo hernia surgery.
Bill benefits allies and convicted coup participants
The legislation does not offer the full amnesty Bolsonaro and his supporters had sought, but it benefits a wide range of convicted individuals. These include senior military officers found guilty of participating in the coup plot and hundreds of people involved in the January 8, 2023, attacks on government buildings in Brasília.
The bill allows sentences for related crimes such as attempted coup and violent abolition of democratic order to be combined, with only the harsher sentence applied. This legal restructuring substantially reduces time served for many defendants.
Public opinion and democratic concerns
The bill’s passage has drawn strong criticism from legal experts and political analysts, many of whom view it as a step backward for democratic accountability. Opinion polls indicate a majority of Brazilians oppose reducing sentences for those involved in the coup attempt.
Prominent journalist Miriam Leitão described the move as reopening Brazil’s historical pattern of impunity, warning that it risks undermining the precedent set by convicting coup plotters for the first time in the country’s history.
Congressional dynamics ahead of 2026 election
Bolsonaro’s family has welcomed the bill despite its limited scope. Senator Flávio Bolsonaro acknowledged it was not the outcome they hoped for but framed it as a political victory. He is currently positioned as the family’s preferred challenger to Lula in the 2026 presidential election.
As Lula prepares to issue his veto, Brazil faces another test of its institutional resilience, with the final outcome resting on whether Congress chooses to uphold or override the president’s decision.
