The 10 proposals approved by the Chamber in Tuesday's session

The Chamber of Deputies approved ten bills during the deliberative session held this Tuesday 14th.
A large part of the texts analyzed by the parliamentarians are related to Education, as part of a concentrated effort in the sector announced the previous week by the president of the House , Hugo Motta (Republicans), in allusion to Teachers' Day, celebrated this Wednesday 15th.
There are also projects linked to childhood, a theme chosen by Motta in allusion to Children's Day, celebrated last Sunday the 12th.
Much of the approved legislation will be sent to the Senate for consideration in the Upper House. Two bills, however, will go directly to the president for approval, having already been approved by the Senate. These two bills address the creation of National Data Protection Day and changes to the school transportation and school meal support programs.
See the list of approved projects:
- PL 2076/2022 – Establishes National Data Protection Day;
- PL 743/2023 – Approves access for rural area teachers to school transport vehicles;
- PL 3824/2023 – Establishes the National Policy for Induction to Teaching in Basic Education;
- PL 6234/2023 – Establishes priority in investigations and criminal proceedings regarding violent deaths in which children and adolescents appear as victims;
- PL 3096/2024 – Amends sections of the National School Transportation Support Program (PNATE) and the National School Feeding Program (PNAE) in federal educational institutions;
- PL 625/2025 – Establishes the “Commitment to Early Childhood Seal”;
- PL 672/2025 – Establishes the right to a minimum wage for temporary teachers ;
- PL 1924/2025 – Establishes the Child Development Strategy;
- PL 2122/2025 – Institutes the National Policy for Emotional Protection, Conscious Education and Combating Violence among Young People; and
- PDL 242/2025 – Approves Brazil’s accession to the Multilateral Investment Fund IV Articles of Agreement (MIF IV) and the Multilateral Investment Fund IV Administration Agreement (MIF IV).
The Chamber still had seven other bills on its agenda for Tuesday's session that were not considered. Once again, the list focused on measures aimed at children and adolescents, as well as texts related to education.

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