Lula’s Lavish Noah’s Arc to Asia: Turning the Presidency into a Luxury Travel Agency
By Hotspotnews
While hardworking Brazilians struggle to put food on the table amid skyrocketing inflation, crushing taxes, and a stagnant economy, President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has once again demonstrated his utter contempt for fiscal responsibility and taxpayer money.
This time, the self-proclaimed champion of the poor embarked on an eight-day extravaganza to India and South Korea (February 17–24, 2026), dragging along an absurd entourage of **10 ministers** and a staggering **315 businessmen** — a floating circus that critics are rightly calling the “Arca de Noé” of government waste.
Is Brazil now operating as a private Chamber of Commerce? Or perhaps a VIP club where politically connected executives get free first-class rides on the presidential plane, luxury accommodations, security details, and endless photo ops — all funded by the sweat of ordinary citizens? This is not diplomacy; this is cronyism on steroids.
Let’s call it what it is: a grotesque misuse of public funds. The Brazilian government isn’t supposed to function as a travel agency for big business elites. When private companies want to pursue deals in Asia, they buy their own tickets, book their own hotels, and hire their own security. But under Lula’s watch, the state rolls out the red carpet — literally — footing the bill for hundreds of executives to tag along on what should be a focused state visit. The agenda may include high-sounding topics like artificial intelligence, agriculture, health partnerships, rare earths/minerals cooperation, and attracting “strategic investments,” but the sheer size of this delegation screams excess and favoritism.
Why 315 businessmen? Why not 100, or 50, or — heaven forbid — let the private sector handle its own networking without taxpayer subsidies? This bloated caravan reeks of the old PT playbook: reward allies in the business world with perks while preaching socialism to the masses. The same government that lectures about inequality is now using public resources to shuttle corporate bigwigs across the globe, ensuring they get prime access to foreign leaders and markets — access the average Brazilian entrepreneur could never dream of affording.
Reports confirm that **agribusiness dominates the delegation**, with nearly 25% (around 77 participants) tied to the sector — companies pushing hard for market openings in protected Asian markets for meat, grains, soy, and other products. Other sectors include mining (critical minerals and rare earths), pharmaceuticals, technology, health, aviation (with Embraer eyeing deals), cosmetics, and more. Specific company names aren’t fully public in every detail, but the list of 315 confirmed participants (obtained and reported by outlets like Poder360) highlights heavy representation from agro giants and related firms, alongside players in tech, mining, and pharma eager for subsidized matchmaking sessions.
These executives get subsidized networking, security, logistics, and the prestige of traveling with the president—advantages small/medium Brazilian firms rarely enjoy. Critics call it crony capitalism: public money subsidizing private profits for a select elite, many with historical ties to PT governments.
And the cost? Astronomical. Previous international jaunts under this administration have burned through tens of millions in airfare alone (not counting hotels, per diems, protocol expenses, and the massive security apparatus required for such a large group). With fuel prices still punishing and public services crumbling, every real spent on this vanity project is a real stolen from health, education, and infrastructure — the very areas Lula claims to champion.
Conservatives have long warned that Lula’s return would bring back the era of unchecked spending, clientelism, and blurred lines between state and private interests. This Asia trip is exhibit A. The president isn’t leading a nation; he’s captaining a luxury liner for the well-connected few.
The big, immediate winners are those **315 businessmen** — many from agribusiness and strategic sectors — who enjoy a taxpayer-funded luxury trade mission disguised as diplomacy. India scores easy geopolitical and resource wins (access to Brazilian minerals for EVs/tech ambitions, prestige from hosting Lula at the AI summit). South Korea gets supply-chain diversification and export opportunities. Brazil’s average citizen? They pay the multimillion-real tab for uncertain, trickle-down benefits that may never arrive — or may only enrich the already powerful.
Enough is enough. Brazilians deserve leaders who respect their money, not squander it on ego-driven spectacles. It’s time to demand accountability: full transparency on every cent spent (including the full list of participants and their companies), a cap on delegation sizes, and an end to treating the presidency like a global joyride for cronies.
The Brazilian people are not a piggy bank for political theater. Stop the waste. Stop the abuse. Bring fiscal sanity back to Brasília — before there’s nothing left in the treasury but IOUs and excuses.
Fora essa farra!


