Mapping the Political Discourse in the Brazilian Chamber of Deputies: A Multi-Faceted Computational Approach

arXiv cs.CL / 4/24/2026

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Key Points

  • The paper argues that analyzing legislative behavior should incorporate the semantic and rhetorical content of political speech, not just voting records.
  • It introduces a scalable framework that combines diachronic stylometric analysis, contextual topic modeling, and semantic clustering to study parliamentary discourse.
  • Using 450,000+ speeches from Brazil’s Chamber of Deputies (2003–2025), the study finds a long-term shift toward shorter, more direct speeches.
  • The analysis also shows that the legislative agenda can pivot sharply in response to national crises, and that discursive alignment often reflects regional and gender identities more than formal party affiliation.
  • Overall, the work provides a multidimensional methodology to complement traditional, vote-based approaches to understanding parliamentary behavior.

Abstract

Analyses of legislative behavior often rely on voting records, overlooking the rich semantic and rhetorical content of political speech. In this paper, we ask three complementary questions about parliamentary discourse: how things are said, what is being said, and who is speaking in discursively similar ways. To answer these questions, we introduce a scalable and generalizable computational framework that combines diachronic stylometric analysis, contextual topic modeling, and semantic clustering of deputies' speeches. We apply this framework to a large-scale case study of the Brazilian Chamber of Deputies, using a corpus of over 450,000 speeches from 2003 to 2025. Our results show a long-term stylistic shift toward shorter and more direct speeches, a legislative agenda that reorients sharply in response to national crises, and a granular map of discursive alignments in which regional and gender identities often prove more salient than formal party affiliation. More broadly, this work offers a robust methodology for analyzing parliamentary discourse as a multidimensional phenomenon that complements traditional vote-based approaches.