Photo: Jonas Pereira / Senate Agency

The National Congress approved this Thursday, 20th, the budget bill (LOA)
of 2025 (PLN 26/2024). The text, approved three months after the deadline, brought news
terrible for the cultural sector: the resources for the Aldir Blanc National Policy (PNAB), more
country's cultural development plan, were reduced by around 85% (they fell from R$3
billion to R$480 million).

Immediately after the announcement of the cut, the National Forum of Secretaries and Directors of
Culture from all over the country announced that its representatives will disembark in large numbers in
Brasília on the 27th, “mobilized and articulated”, to try to reverse this decision.
If it comes to fruition, the blow to the Aldir Blanc Law (LAB) will make the most important policy unfeasible
public cultural heritage that the country has managed to build in its history – the resources go to the
federative entities, municipalities, states and the Federal District, to support projects. The
The contradiction is that the National Congress, at the same time that it cut the LAB, reserved
R$50 billion for parliamentary amendments.

“PNAB represents a historic achievement of Brazilian culture, consolidating a
permanent public policy of development, built with broad federative agreement”,
said the note from the Forum, chaired by the Secretary of Culture of Espírito Santo, Fabrício
Noronha. The cut was made by the LDO rapporteur, Senator Angelo Coronel (PSD-BA), and
not by the government, which had committed to maintaining the resources when it sent the
bill to Congress. Activists believe they can reverse the prediction of
expenses. To be valid, the project now depends on the sanction of President Lula and the publication
in the Federal Official Gazette.

Approved unanimously by the National Congress during Jair's government
Bolsonaro, enemy of cultural policies, the Aldir Blanc Law is an expense legislation
mandatory, which cannot be cut or contingent. The resources of the Policy
National Aldir Blanc for the Promotion of Culture (PNAB) are intended for actions and projects of
throughout the country, without distinction of party affiliation. The federal government planned to allocate
annually R$ 3 billion until 2027 for the sector, and the application is made by the sector itself
federative entities through notices and awards. It has become the largest cultural policy of the
country in terms of direct investment from the Union.


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