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Brazil's Senate approved legislation to reduce the sentence former leader Jair Bolsonaro must serve for plotting a coup after his narrow 2022 election loss, setting up a potential clash between Congress, President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and the country's Supreme Court.
Brazil's Senate approved legislation to reduce the sentence former leader Jair Bolsonaro must serve for plotting a coup after his narrow 2022 election loss, setting up a potential clash between Congress, President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and the country's Supreme Court.
On Wednesday, 48 senators voted in favor of the bill and 25 against, granting final approval to a proposal the lower house of Congress passed earlier this month. It now goes to Lula, as the president is known. He was the target of the overthrow effort Bolsonaro plotted, and who will now decide whether to veto it.
The leftist leader has suggested that he will strike down the bill that would reduce the 27-year jail sentence Bolsonaro received in September to 20 years and nine months, according to lower house calculations. The legislation also caps the time the right-wing former president would spend behind bars in a so-called "closed regime" at two years and four months, down from six-to-eight years he's currently facing.
"I will do what I understand must be done, because he has to pay for the attempted coup, for the attempt to destroy the democracy of this country," Lula said in an interview with a local TV station last week.
A veto would almost certainly exacerbate tensions between Lula and Congress at a time when the two sides have already battled over a Supreme Court nomination and other issues.
Last Sunday, Lula supporters staged large demonstrations against the legislation that seeks to reduce sentences for Brazilians convicted of crimes related to the Jan. 8, 2023 insurrection attempt that followed Lula's election, including for Bolsonaro.
It also remains unclear whether passage would pacify Bolsonaro allies, including his son Flavio, who have pushed for broad, unconditional amnesty for the former president and others involved in the insurrection attempt.
Flavio, a senator, earlier this month said he had his father's backing to run for president next year, a decision that dented investor desires to see Sao Paulo Governor Tarcisio de Freitas challenge Lula instead.
Flavio later said he was open to negotiating with centrist lawmakers over his candidacy, but that the price for dropping his presidential bid would be securing his father's freedom and eligibility to run in 2026.
The bill's passage could provide a boost to sagging investor hopes that Freitas will still run, although key Bolsonaro supporters, including the leader of his party in the lower house, have said they intend to keep pushing for total amnesty.
Regardless of Lula's decision, the case could wind up in front of the Supreme Court, which has convicted more than 800 people of crimes related to the Jan. 8 riots. If an appeal reaches the court, the justices could rule the congressional measure unconstitutional.
Justice Alexandre de Moraes, who oversees cases related to the attempted coup, criticized the idea of reducing sentences during a trial Tuesday.
"That would send a message to society that Brazil tolerates, or will tolerate, new flirtations with authoritarianism," he said. "The state's response must be firm, and punish those who attempted to destroy Brazil's democracy."
Stocks rallied at the open, bouncing after a sharp selloff Wednesday, as a cooler-than-expected inflation report lifted hopes that the Federal Reserve would cut interest rates further. An optimistic outlook in the tech sector also lifted sentiment.
The S&P 500 Index opened 1% higher Thursday morning and looks to snap a four-day losing streak. Micron Technology Inc. was the top-performing stock in the benchmark after providing an upbeat forecast, citing the ability to charge more for products given rising demand and supply shortages.
The tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 Index advanced 1.3%, rebounding after its biggest daily drop in a month, while the blue chip Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.5%.
"The earnings engine in the United States is on," Emily Roland, co-chief investment strategist at Manulife John Hancock Investments, in a Bloomberg TV interview. She's looking for earnings growth outside of the tech for 2026, after being overweight the sector for much of 2025.
"We still like tech, but there's no doubt about it, it's expensive," she added.
The lofty valuations of AI stocks continue to concern investors. About 57% of participants in a Deutsche Bank survey said a potential plunge in AI valuations is the biggest risk to market stability in 2026. Separately, JPMorgan Chase & Co. warned of "extreme crowding" in speculative stocks, including a handful of AI-linked names.
Thursday's market move follows a cooler-than-expected inflation report. The core consumer price index rose 2.6% in November, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics — well below expectations for a 3.1% gain. Traders also focused on jobless claims data, which showed continuing claims rising to 1.9 million.
"The Fed could look at the increase in the unemployment rate and the tame inflation reading as a reason to cut again," said Brian Jacobsen, chief economic strategist at Annex Wealth Management.
US President Donald Trump said in a televised address Wednesday night that he would soon pick a new Fed chair that would bring rates down significantly further as he sought to calm concerns about the high cost of living.
"A Santa Rally could still be in the cards," said David Russell, global head of market strategy at TradeStation,
Still ahead, FedEx Corp. and Nike Inc. are set to report earnings after the closing bell Thursday. Traders will also parse existing home sales data and a University of Michigan survey of inflation expectations, which are expected Friday morning, for additional clues on the central bank's rate path.
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