The federal government's commitment today is not to let the electoral spirit and the demands that appear from different sectors take over the national economic agenda and harm the country, stated the Minister of Finance, Dario Durigan. The minister related his speech to the topic of bomb agendas in the National Congress, during an interview on the program Alô Alô Brasil, on Rádio Nacional, given to José Luiz Datena, this Friday (12). Related news: "Brazil doesn't lower its head", says Durigan when defending sovereignty and Pix. Renan says that the Senate will not have a bomb agenda and promises to collaborate with the government. The term bomb agenda refers to a bill or Legislative matter that creates high-value expenses, putting pressure on public coffers, or reducing revenue, causing a strong negative impact on public accounts and potentially violating the Fiscal Responsibility Law. Bomb agendas have appeared in recent days due to repeated approvals of proposals in both Houses of the National Congress. "Of course, we understand that senators and deputies want to respond to their bases at this very important moment in democracy, but things have to fit within the country's forces, within the budget, and that's what I've been saying. All of us in the country, be it government, National Congress, Judiciary, we have to have fiscal responsibility towards future generations and the future of the country", commented Durigan. This Thursday (11), the government released a note showing the fiscal impact of nine proposals being processed in the National Congress with an estimated financial cost of R$111 billion per year, according to estimates prepared by the technical bodies of the Executive Branch. According to the federal government's accounts, several projects being processed in the National Congress, if approved, would cause a strong fiscal impact: project that deals with the renegotiation of debts with equalization of interest rates by the Union accounts for a cost of up to R$140 billion over 13 years; which raises the ceiling of Simples Nacional implies a loss of revenue of R$50 billion per year; the PEC that expands the Municipal Participation Fund reduces the Union's net revenues by R$10 billion annually; The proposal that expands the tax immunity of religious temples has a minimum estimated cost of R$10 billion per year. the project that creates benefits for non-profit entities, represents a waiver of R$1 billion per year; the PEC that links resources to the Unified Social Assistance System generates an average additional expense of R$9 billion per year, considering the total increase between 2026 and 2030; The project that establishes a new Special Tax Regularization Program (Pert) has an average cost of R$8.8 billion annually. project that refers to doctors and dental surgeons, would increase the Union's expenditure by R$8.4 billion per year, not counting states, municipalities and the Ebserh network; differentiated retirement for community health workers and those fighting endemic diseases increases the financial insufficiency of social security systems by R$3 billion per year. "It's an impact of R$ 111 billion in one year. If you add up all the investment that the federal government makes, it took us more than two years to be able to invest R$ 11 billion. So it's not possible for us to hire, without a source of resources compatible with tax laws, such a volume of expenditure or loss of revenue at this moment", explained the minister. Durigan mentioned conversations held on the subject with the presidents of the houses of the National Congress, and mentioned that he was with the president of the Senate, Davi Alcolumbre, who has helped in the responsible management of these issues. "We are not making any maneuvers, putting friction where it is not needed. I have no interest in protecting any specific sector. My interest is for the country to grow as a whole. And that is why I always take the arguments I get from the team and the market, to point out the risks and convince the National Congress." Durigan expressed concern about the country's stability in relation to the moment of global instability, with the rise in oil prices, compromised stock markets and uncertainties generating central banks' concerns about inflation. "And we, in Brazil, have to focus our energy on what matters to the country. We will choose agendas, vote on important issues for the country in a unified way. When we start to present other projects to meet sectoral flags to the detriment of the population as a whole, we lose strength as a country and our economy can be weakened and people come to complain", said the minister. STF If Congress insists on maintaining the bomb agendas, Durigan does not rule out that the government will appeal to the Federal Supreme Court (STF) in line with what already exists in relation to previous measures, requiring that fiscal rules be demanded by the government, but also by the National Congress. "Of course, we have to overcome the stages in Congress, preventing bad measures from being voted on. If necessary, the government will go to the STF. Now, Congress is the one who has to take measures, which is sovereign. And the processing of issues there needs to observe these minimum requirements", he said.