How Barroso Invited Foreign interference in Brazil 2022 election
By Hotspotnews
In a stunning admission that reeks of globalist overreach, Brazil’s Supreme Court Minister Luís Roberto Barroso has pulled back the curtain on his own role in what conservatives see as a blatant assault on national sovereignty. Speaking at a high-profile event in New York last May,
Barroso casually revealed that, during his tenure as president of the Superior Electoral Court, he held not one, not two, but three secret meetings with the U.S. chargé d’affaires in Brazil. His goal? To solicit American muscle in propping up what he called “democracy” – but what many patriots recognize as a rigged system designed to oust a pro-American leader and install a leftist puppet.
Barroso didn’t mince words: he begged for official U.S. statements endorsing Brazil’s institutions, knowing full well that the Brazilian military – reliant on American training and equipment – wouldn’t dare cross Uncle Sam. “The Brazilian military doesn’t like to fall out with the United States,” he boasted, as if engineering foreign influence over his own country’s armed forces was just another day at the office. This wasn’t diplomacy; it was desperation from a judge hell-bent on preventing Jair Bolsonaro, a staunch Trump ally and defender of conservative values, from challenging an election marred by fraud allegations.
But Barroso’s actions didn’t stop at cozy chats. They were part of a broader web spun by the Biden administration’s deep state apparatus. Enter USAID – the so-called aid agency that tripled its funding to Brazilian NGOs, fact-checkers, and “anti-disinformation” outfits just in time for the 2022 vote. These groups, often masquerading as guardians of truth, were weaponized to censor Bolsonaro supporters, silence dissent, and paint any skepticism about electronic voting as “extremism.” It’s the same playbook we’ve seen in the U.S.: Big Tech, government bureaucrats, and shadowy nonprofits teaming up to throttle free speech under the guise of fighting “fake news.”
Mike Benz, a former State Department insider turned whistleblower, has connected the dots in chilling detail. He describes this as a “censorship industrial complex” exported abroad, with the National Endowment for Democracy and other U.S.-funded entities bankrolling operations to topple pro-U.S. governments like Bolsonaro’s. Why? Because Bolsonaro was a thorn in the side of the global elite – prioritizing American partnerships, cracking down on corruption, and resisting the radical green agenda that funnels trillions to insiders.
The payoff was swift and devastating. Bolsonaro’s defeat paved the way for Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, a convicted felon turned president, who wasted no time realigning Brazil with China. Under Lula, U.S. contracts were ditched, and a massive $1.3 trillion climate finance scheme was launched – complete with clean ethanol mandates that line the pockets of billionaire activists like George Soros. It’s no coincidence: Barroso’s “decisive” U.S. support helped install a regime that’s cozying up to Beijing, eroding Brazil’s independence and turning it into another cog in the communist machine.
Conservatives in Brazil and beyond are outraged. This isn’t defending democracy; it’s destroying it. Barroso, hailed as a hero by the left-wing media, stands exposed as a willing accomplice in a foreign-orchestrated power grab. His convictions against Bolsonaro – slapping him with 27 years for supposedly plotting a “coup” – smell like payback for daring to question the very system Barroso fortified with American help.
The lesson is clear: When judges like Barroso invite the deep state to meddle, it’s the people who pay the price. Brazil deserves leaders who put their nation first, not globalist puppets dancing to Washington’s – or worse, Beijing’s – tune. It’s time to expose these betrayals and reclaim true sovereignty before it’s too late.
Yes, LIDE (Líderes Empresariais) is linked to China. It has a dedicated division called LIDE China, which actively promotes business connections, investments, and trade between Brazil and China, including organizing events like the Brazil-China Meeting and serving as a bridge for commercial relations between the two countries.


