Brazil Must Reject Sharia: Chamber President Hugo Motta Should Not Archive PL 824/2026

By Hotspotnews

In a bold defense of Brazilian sovereignty and individual liberty, Deputy Luiz Philippe de Orleans e Bragança has introduced PL 824/2026, a straightforward bill that prohibits the promotion or application of Sharia law—or any parallel religious legal system—in Brazil when it conflicts with the nation’s Constitution. The proposal rightly prioritizes the protection of women, children, and minorities from practices incompatible with Brazilian values, such as forced marriages, corporal punishment, and the subjugation of individual rights to religious edicts.

Yet, instead of welcoming this common-sense measure, the National Association of Islamic Jurists (ANAJI) has demanded that Chamber of Deputies President Hugo Motta immediately archive the bill. They claim it constitutes religious discrimination and threatens freedom of belief. This reaction reveals a deeper agenda: the push for parallel legal systems that could undermine Brazil’s secular republic and open the door to the very problems plaguing parts of Europe today.

Brazil’s Constitution is clear. The country is a secular state where one law applies to all citizens. No foreign or religious code can supersede national statutes on family matters, criminal justice, or civil rights. PL 824/2026 does not ban peaceful religious practice or personal faith. It simply draws a firm line: Sharia norms that treat women as second-class citizens, permit child marriages, or endorse harsh physical penalties have no place in Brazilian society. Conservatives understand this as essential border security for our legal system—preventing the gradual erosion of Western-inspired freedoms that define modern Brazil.

The images circulating alongside the debate speak volumes: signs of Sharia courts in distant lands and women shrouded in restrictive attire under enforcement regimes. These are not abstract fears. They reflect documented realities in nations where Sharia gains influence, leading to segregated communities, honor-based violence, and parallel tribunals that bypass state authority. Brazil, with its proud history of integration and religious tolerance rooted in Judeo-Christian and Enlightenment principles, has no obligation to import such conflicts.

ANAJI’s demand for archiving the bill is a telling overreach. By framing constitutional supremacy as “Islamophobia,” they shift the focus from protecting vulnerable Brazilians to shielding ideological imports. True religious freedom means practicing faith without violating the rights of others. It does not include importing medieval legal frameworks that clash with equality before the law. Conservatives have long warned that multiculturalism without assimilation invites division. Europe’s experience—with no-go zones, grooming scandals, and Sharia patrols—serves as a cautionary tale. Brazil should learn from those mistakes rather than repeat them.

President Hugo Motta faces a pivotal choice. As leader of the Chamber, he must prioritize national unity and the rule of law over pressure from niche advocacy groups. Archiving this bill would send the wrong message: that foreign religious lobbies can dictate legislative priorities. Instead, Motta should allow the proposal to advance through committees, sparking open debate on constitutional supremacy. Public pressure is already mounting, with calls for the Mesa Diretora to let PL 824/2026 proceed. This is not about targeting any community but affirming that in Brazil, the Constitution reigns supreme—no exceptions for imported theocracies.

Conservatives stand firm: Protect Brazilian women and children first. Safeguard secular governance. Reject any parallel legal systems that threaten our shared freedoms. PL 824/2026 is not radical; it is responsible stewardship of the nation. The Chamber must move forward with it, ensuring Brazil remains a beacon of liberty rather than a testing ground for incompatible ideologies. The future of our republic depends on leaders with the courage to say no to Sharia’s encroachment.

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