Newstral
Article
Financial Times on 2023-08-23 04:07
Brazilian politics: Brazil’s congress approves looser spending rules in boost for Lula
Related news
- Brazilian politics: Lula expected to appoint leftwing loyalist as Brazil’s finance ministerFinancial Times
- Brazilian politics: Brazil’s Lula seals pact with opposition parties in hopes of political boostFinancial Times
- Brazilian politics: Lula to be sworn in as Brazil’s new president amid tight securityFinancial Times
- Brazilian politics: Lula tightens Brazil’s gun controls and targets gold mining in AmazonFinancial Times
- Brazilian politics: Brazil’s Lula dismisses army chief in aftermath of Brasília riotsFinancial Times
- Brazilian politics: Brazil lawmakers approve $28bn increase in spending cap for Lula plansFinancial Times
- FBrazilian politics: Lula steps up interventions in Brazil’s largest companiesft.com
- Brazilian politics: Supporters of Jair Bolsonaro invade Brazil’s congressFinancial Times
- Brazilian politics: Brazil’s supreme court declares ‘secret budget’ unconstitutionalFinancial Times
- Brazilian politics: Lula looks to reduce role of armed forces in Brazilian politicsFinancial Times
- Brazilian economy: Brazil’s second-quarter growth beats estimates in boost for LulaFinancial Times
- Brazilian society: ‘Public security is impossible’: Lula takes on Brazil’s gun ownersFinancial Times
- Brazilian politics: Brazil’s political brawler Ciro Gomes takes election fight to Lula and BolsonaroFinancial Times
- Brazilian politics: News in-depth. Bolsonaro and Lula fight it out in Brazil’s swing stateFinancial Times
- Brazilian politics: Lula nears pact with Brazilian rightwingers to boost passage of agendaFinancial Times
- Brazilian politics: Brazil workers’ movement steps up land invasions under LulaFinancial Times
- Brazilian politics: Brazil’s civil society defends democracy against Bolsonaro attacksFinancial Times
- Brazilian politics: Brazil’s Centrão: the political kingmakers propping up BolsonaroFinancial Times
- Brazil’s Lula can only succeed through pragmatismFinancial Times
- BHow Even a Convicted Lula Might Sway Brazilian Politicsbloomberg.com