With the return of Brazil’s Congress from its mid-year recess last week, the Dilma government – bruised and politically weaker after the fall of three key ministers, two of them on influence-peddling/corruption allegations – has begun another concerted effort to muscle through several important legislative projects. Even in the best of times, the young administration would have a bracing semester ahead, with the still-simmering subsalt royalties bill, planned new mining legislation, and...
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