Lula’s Judicial Coup in the Shadows: The Toffoli Affair Exposes the Real Threat to Brazilian Democracy
In a stunning display of raw power politics, President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva is reportedly orchestrating a backroom campaign to force Supreme Court Justice Dias Toffoli off the bench—using medical leave as a polite fig leaf for outright resignation. This isn’t speculation from fringe blogs or opposition memes. It comes straight from the pages of one of Brazil’s most established newspapers, where veteran columnist Malu Gaspar detailed how Lula is leaning on allies to convince Toffoli that damaging revelations from Federal Police probes into his ties with banker Daniel Vorcaro are about to explode.
Lula’s pitch to close confidants, according to the reporting, is blunt: what’s already public is just the “appetizer.” More is coming. The goal? Clear the deck to protect Justice Alexandre de Moraes and shield the court’s image from the growing Banco Master scandal—contracts, suspicious transactions, and connections that have already forced Toffoli to step aside as relator. Toffoli, to his credit, has pushed back hard, denying any plans to leave and insisting there’s nothing new to fear. But the mere fact that the president of the republic is treating a sitting Supreme Court minister like a disposable pawn reveals the depths of this administration’s contempt for institutional boundaries.
This is the same Lula who spent years lecturing the country about “democracy under threat” and “institutional respect.” Remember the endless sermons about Bolsonaro’s supposed interference with the Federal Police in 2020? The left and the STF spent months portraying a simple director nomination as an existential danger to the republic, complete with injunctions, leaks, and moral outrage. Fast-forward to 2026, and here is Lula himself—fresh off a narrow reelection—personally meddling in the judiciary’s composition to save his allies. The hypocrisy is breathtaking.
The consequences for Lula and his project are already unfolding, and they could prove fatal.
First, this move shatters whatever remains of Lula’s “institutionalist” brand. For years he has positioned himself as the adult in the room, the defender of the 1988 Constitution against supposed authoritarian impulses on the right. Now he stands exposed as willing to twist the very separation of powers he claims to cherish. If the STF—already polling at historic lows of public trust—becomes seen as a Lula protection racket, the backlash will be seismic. Independent voters and even moderate leftists who bought the “Bolsonaro bad, Lula normal” narrative will recoil. The court’s credibility, already in freefall, risks total collapse.
Second, it hands the opposition a gift-wrapped campaign weapon for 2026 and beyond. Senate races this year already feature a wave of anti-STF candidates riding public disgust with Moraes’ censorship machine and the court’s overreach. Lula’s clumsy attempt to “manage” Toffoli’s exit will turbocharge that momentum. Every conservative voice in Congress and on social media now has fresh ammunition: “Lula is doing exactly what he accused us of—and worse.” Flávio Bolsonaro, Tarcísio de Freitas, and the broader right-wing bench will hammer this theme relentlessly. Polls already show record distrust in the judiciary; this scandal will accelerate the shift toward candidates promising to clip the STF’s wings through constitutional amendments or Senate oversight.
Third, the legal and political blowback could ensnare Lula himself. By inserting himself into an active Federal Police investigation—knowing details that haven’t been made public—Lula invites accusations of obstruction or undue influence. The very prosecutors and investigators he once celebrated may now find themselves in an awkward spot. If Vorcaro’s promised “serious plea deal” drops bombshells involving court members, the narrative that Lula tried to preemptively neutralize the fallout will stick. Impeachment talk may remain premature, but the optics of executive meddling in the judiciary are toxic. Investors hate uncertainty; markets already jittery over fiscal chaos will read this as more proof that Brazil’s institutions are for sale to whoever holds Planalto.
Finally, and most dangerously for Lula’s legacy, this episode accelerates the very crisis of legitimacy he claims to fight. Brazilians have watched the STF morph from constitutional guardian into political actor—banning candidates, censoring speech, and now apparently taking orders from the executive branch. When the people lose faith in both the presidency and the highest court simultaneously, the foundation of the republic trembles. Lula’s maneuver isn’t just cynical politics; it’s a self-inflicted wound that confirms what millions already suspect: the system is rigged to protect those in power, not the citizenry.
Toffoli’s refusal to play ball may delay the plan, but the damage is done. The story is out. The public is watching. A president who lectures endlessly about democracy while privately engineering judicial exits is not defending the republic—he is undermining it. The consequences will not be measured in headlines alone. They will echo in the ballot box, in the streets, and in the slow erosion of the trust that once held Brazil together. Lula has rolled the dice on raw power. History suggests such bets rarely end well for those who make them.


