Lula’s Belém Boast: When a President Mistakes Regional Pride for National Strength
By Hotspotnews
Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has never been shy about colorful language, but his latest outburst against German Chancellor Friedrich Merz marks a new low in diplomatic maturity. Responding to Merz’s perfectly reasonable observation that his delegation was eager to return home from the COP30 summit in Belém, Lula declared that Berlin “doesn’t offer 10% of the quality” that the capital of Pará provides. He then urged the German leader to eat maniçoba, dance carimbó, and, for good measure, hit a boteco for ice-cold chope, as if a night of bar snacks and folk dancing could erase the power outages, flooded streets, and logistical chaos that every foreign delegation experienced.
Merz did not insult Brazil. He simply spoke an obvious truth: Belém, for all its warmth and cultural richness, is not yet equipped to host a global summit without enormous strain. Yet instead of treating the remark as the constructive criticism it was, Lula turned it into a populist spectacle. The crowd at the bridge inauguration cheered wildly, because that is what Lula’s base wants to hear: the old story that Brazil’s problems are never the fault of its own governments, but of arrogant foreigners who fail to appreciate our “soul.”
This is not leadership; it is deflection. The people of Belém deserve reliable electricity, functioning sewers, and roads that do not become rivers after every rain. They do not need their president using them as props in a feel-good nationalist rant while the city’s chronic underinvestment remains on full display for the world to see.
Even more troubling is the timing. Lula is desperate to close the Mercosur-EU trade agreement before the end of the year, a deal he has called the crowning achievement of Brazil’s Mercosur presidency. Emmanuel Macron, already lukewarm because of French farmers’ fears of Brazilian beef, made only a fleeting appearance at the Belém summit. Now, with Lula publicly humiliating Europe’s second-most powerful leader on the world stage, Berlin’s conservatives have every reason to slow-walk ratification. Why rush to open European markets to a country whose president thinks a plate of maniçoba and a night in a boteco are legitimate substitutes for basic governance?
With Donald Trump already ten months into his second term and brandishing new tariffs on half the planet, the European Union is looking for reliable partners, not for leaders who prefer barroom bravado to serious negotiation. If the Mercosur deal collapses or drags into 2026, Lula will have no one to blame but himself and the mirror he refuses to look into.
Brazil is blessed with natural beauty, cultural depth, and resilient people. None of those gifts, however, absolve a government of the duty to deliver results. Until the Lula administration can host an international summit without embarrassing itself and can negotiate trade deals without insulting its counterparts, perhaps a little less boasting and a lot more building would serve the country better.
The world already knows the Amazon is extraordinary. It is still waiting for a Brazilian government that can govern it, and the rest of the country, with competence instead of carnival rhetoric.


