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The new government of Lula da Silva will have 37 ministries

MADRID, 18 Dic.

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The new government of Lula da Silva will have 37 ministries

MADRID, 18 Dic. (EUROPA PRESS) -

The future Brazilian Minister of the Presidency and current governor of the state of Bahia, Rui Costa, stated this Saturday that the government of Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, of the Workers' Party (PT), will be made up of 37 ministries.

This was announced by Costa himself during a press conference after meeting with the president-elect Lula da Silva, the president of the PT, Gleisi Hoffmann, and the future president of the public bank BNDES, Aloizio Mercadante, as reported by the G1 chain.

In this way, the next Brazilian Executive will have up to 14 more ministries than that of outgoing President Jair Bolsonaro, whose cabinet is made up of 23 portfolios. However, Lula da Silva's will not be the government with the most ministers in Brazilian history, since Dilma Rousseff's had 39.

Although so far it has not been revealed who will lead the 37 ministries that will make up the new Brazilian government, the future Minister of the Presidency has detailed the names of some of the portfolios that will be created.

For example, the current Ministry of Economy will be divided into four portfolios: Finance, Planning, Industry and Commerce, and Management and Development. Likewise, the Ministry of Infrastructure will be divided into the Ministry of Transport and the Ministry of Ports and Airports.

Costa has also announced that the future cabinet will also have the Ministry of Indigenous Peoples, another for sports and a folder for women. He has also cited the creation of the Ministry of Cities, a division of the Ministry of Regional Development, according to 'Folha de S.Paulo'.

However, the future Minister of the Presidency has specified that the increase in the number of ministries will not imply an increase in public spending, since new positions will not be created, but rather the current secretaries of each portfolio will become ministers.

"We will expand the 23 existing ministries to 37, maintaining the same volume of positions. With this, we improve the representativeness of the different segments of society through the ministries, without implying an increase in public spending," Costa wrote in the Twitter social network.