Cristiano Noronha, vice president of Arko Advice, said the Caso Master and other high-profile legislative issues will dominate politics in Brasília next week [1].

The situation is significant because the Caso Master has become a central point of political debate in Brazil. This occurs after the Central Bank ordered the extrajudicial liquidation of Master Bank [2].

Noronha said that the upcoming week will continue with the Caso Master and other "pautas-bomba" — or high-impact legislative agendas — dominating the proceedings in Congress [1]. The focus on these issues reflects a broader struggle within the federal capital as different ideological groups attempt to use the bank's collapse to shape the legislative priorities of the government [2].

"The coming week will continue with the Caso Master and the bomb-agendas in processing in Congress dominating politics in Brasília," Noronha said [1].

The political climate in Brasília remains tense as legislators navigate the fallout from the bank's liquidation. The intersection of financial failure and political maneuvering has turned a regulatory action by the Central Bank into a primary driver of the legislative schedule [2].

Noronha's assessment suggests that the legislative body will remain preoccupied with these volatile topics rather than shifting toward routine governance. The persistence of these "bomb-agendas" indicates that the political fallout from the Master Bank case is far from resolved [1].

The coming week will continue with the Caso Master and the bomb-agendas in processing in Congress dominating politics in Brasília.

The continued dominance of the Caso Master in the legislative agenda indicates that the financial collapse of Master Bank is being leveraged as a political tool. When a regulatory action by the Central Bank triggers a legislative 'bomb-agenda,' it typically suggests that the fallout is being used by opposing ideological factions to challenge the current administration's stability or oversight capabilities.