Post by firoj1919 on Feb 21, 2024 22:35:49 GMT -5
ConJur Editor With himTax The Association of Judges for Democracy a non-governmental, non-profit and corporate entity, wants parliamentarians to maintain the veto of the President of the Republic, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, on Amendment 3, of the Super-Receita. In a letter sent to parliamentarians, the association claims that maintaining the veto is necessary because the text of the amendment violates the principles of the Constitution: the dignity of the human person and the social values of work, in addition to violating international treaties and conventions. The amendment was vetoed on March 16. It prevented tax auditors from fining companies that hire professionals who set up a company to provide services. These are called “one person” companies.
The government also gave up on issuing a Provisional Measure to regulate the actions of inspectors on companies providing services to just one person. Read the full letter: The Judges for Democracy Association, a non-governmental, non-profit or corporate entity, nationwide, comes to your presence. to request a special commitment to maintain the presidential veto on amendment 3, the Oman Mobile Number List text of which violates the founding principles of the Republic: the dignity of the human person and the social values of work, in addition to violating international treaties and conventions, signed and ratified by the Brazilian State, such as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the Pact of Saint Joseph of Costa Rica and ILO conventions and abolition of forced labor) and 81 (mandatory inspection of labor in economic activity.
It emerges from the daily routine of the Labor Court that, not only in the extreme situations of slave labor and the exploitation of child labor, but in many others, the efficiency of the MTE's supervision is decisive for judicial action, from the perspective of guaranteeing the principles and values referred to. We are certain that rejecting the veto means abandoning the poor to their own devices and releasing the production of superfluous beings, people who do not belong to the world in any way and, therefore, the primacy that everyone is equal before the law, not the reaches. For these reasons, we expect from you. that the presidential veto be maintained, as a measure to preserve the dignity of workers, only possible without the precariousness of workers' rights. Marcelo Semer President of the Executive Council of the Judges for Democracy.
The government also gave up on issuing a Provisional Measure to regulate the actions of inspectors on companies providing services to just one person. Read the full letter: The Judges for Democracy Association, a non-governmental, non-profit or corporate entity, nationwide, comes to your presence. to request a special commitment to maintain the presidential veto on amendment 3, the Oman Mobile Number List text of which violates the founding principles of the Republic: the dignity of the human person and the social values of work, in addition to violating international treaties and conventions, signed and ratified by the Brazilian State, such as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the Pact of Saint Joseph of Costa Rica and ILO conventions and abolition of forced labor) and 81 (mandatory inspection of labor in economic activity.
It emerges from the daily routine of the Labor Court that, not only in the extreme situations of slave labor and the exploitation of child labor, but in many others, the efficiency of the MTE's supervision is decisive for judicial action, from the perspective of guaranteeing the principles and values referred to. We are certain that rejecting the veto means abandoning the poor to their own devices and releasing the production of superfluous beings, people who do not belong to the world in any way and, therefore, the primacy that everyone is equal before the law, not the reaches. For these reasons, we expect from you. that the presidential veto be maintained, as a measure to preserve the dignity of workers, only possible without the precariousness of workers' rights. Marcelo Semer President of the Executive Council of the Judges for Democracy.