The Americas | Who’s in charge?

How Brazilian lawmakers won extra powers to waste money

Congress’s capture of the budget is making Brazil less governable

Brazil's President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.
Photograph: Reuters
|SÃO PAULO

President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva is exasperated. “In no other country in the world has Congress kidnapped part of the budget” as has happened in Brazil, he fumed in August. He has a point. In the past decade Brazil’s Congress has become one of the most powerful in the world by giving itself ever greater control of the country’s federal budget. The Supreme Court and Lula, as the president is universally known, are trying to curb legislators’ extravaganza of pork-barrel spending, which fosters corruption and imperils the country’s fiscal targets. In response, Congress is threatening a power grab.

Explore more

This article appeared in the The Americas section of the print edition under the headline “Who’s in charge?”

From the September 21st 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

Discover more

Images show uncontacted tribe of Mashco Piro dangerously close to logging concessions.

Peruvians are debating how to protect isolated tribes

Deaths in the Amazon are bringing matters to a head

Fans of Nacional, during the Torneo Intermedio 2024 final match.

Why is football in Latin America so complex?

Money-grubbing and regulatory capture explain its Byzantine leagues


Brazil's former president Jair Bolsonaro greets supporters.

Jair Bolsonaro still shapes Brazil’s political right

Would-be successors are pandering to his fans


Digital nomads are a force for good in Latin America

It is unfair to blame remote workers for gentrifying neighbourhoods and raising rents

President Andrés Manuel López Obrador is militarising public security

The latest constitutional reform will complicate the fight against drug gangs

The woman who will lead Chile’s counter-revolution

Chileans tried youthful utopianism. Now they crave maturity and moderation