The Right Choice: VP Candidates for Flávio Bolsonaro’s 2026 Ticket – Strength, Loyalty, and the Cleanest Records ‘
By Hotspotnews
As Brazil heads into the decisive 2026 presidential election, Senator Flávio Bolsonaro’s potential ticket represents a chance to restore conservative principles: strong security, defense of the family, support for agribusiness, and resistance to the woke agenda and judicial overreach. The vice-presidential pick is crucial—not just for electoral math in key states like São Paulo and Minas Gerais, but for signaling continuity with President Jair Bolsonaro’s legacy while broadening appeal without compromising core values.
Several names are circulating. In a political landscape where the left weaponizes every past statement or association, conservatives must prioritize competence, regional balance, and records with the fewest exploitable weaknesses. Here’s a balanced assessment of the leading contenders.
Romeu Zema (Novo-MG): High Impact but Notable Baggage
The Good: Former Governor of Minas Gerais, Zema earned respect for fiscal discipline, privatizations, and pro-business policies in Brazil’s second-largest electoral state. He appeals to agribusiness, industry, and market-oriented voters. His bold “anti-system” rhetoric energizes conservatives.
The Bad: Pandemic measures followed by anti-system positioning, fura-fila vaccination scandal, mining probes involving appointees, and Copasa allegations. His current presidential run adds uncertainty.
Tereza Cristina (PP-MS): The Agro Powerhouse with Light Baggage
The Good: Former Agriculture Minister with proven results in exports and defense of rural Brazil. Strong Central-West appeal and pragmatism. Minimal personal scandals.
The Bad: Centrão ties and policy attacks from environmentalists on pesticide reforms.
Guilherme Derrite (PP-SP): The Law-and-Order Xerife with Security Focus
The Good: Loyal bolsonarista with strong anti-crime credentials and results in São Paulo.
The Bad: Criticism over police lethality and provisions in anti-crime bills seen as weakening investigations.
Luiz Philippe de Orleans e Bragança (PL-SP): The Imperial Conservative with Ideological Depth
The Good: No scandals, Federal Deputy, descendant of the Brazilian Imperial Family, and a prominent voice for liberal-conservative values. Elected president of the Foreign Relations and Defense Committee (CREDN) in 2026, he has been a fierce critic of Lula’s foreign policy and defender of Western civilization, property rights, and anti-woke positions. Bolsonaro himself considered him for VP in 2018. He brings São Paulo electoral weight, intellectual gravitas, historical symbolism that resonates with traditional conservatives, and strong alignment with Flávio on key issues. His profile appeals to monarchist-leaning and culturally rooted voters on the right.
The concerns: unproven 2018 rumors of a compromising dossiê (which prevented his VP selection then) occasionally resurface. A 2025 column warning about sharia and “cultural war” drew accusations of intolerance from interfaith groups. His public affiliation with Freemasonry sparks debate among some traditional Catholic conservatives. Overall, these are more ideological or historical than governance scandals.
Luiz Philippe stands out as a principled, high-profile option with deep conservative roots and foreign policy expertise.
Simone Marquetto (PP-SP) and Clarissa Tércio (PP-PE): Fresh Female Voices with the Lightest Records
Simone Marquetto offers a business-oriented profile for broader moderate and female appeal with minimal baggage.
Clarissa Tércio brings Northeast strength and bold cultural stands against gender ideology.
The Bad (Contextual): Mostly parliamentary spats or archived probes tied to principled positions.
Prioritizing Records That Strengthen, Not Weaken, the Ticket
In the battle against Lula’s machine, conservatives should favor partners whose pasts reinforce renewal rather than hand ammunition. Tereza Cristina, Simone Marquetto, Clarissa Tércio, and Luiz Philippe de Orleans e Bragança currently present fewer exploitable weaknesses — policy disagreements aside — making them strong for unity and runoff appeal. Zema and Derrite bring firepower but more baggage that demands defense.
Flávio Bolsonaro has the name recognition and family brand. Pairing him with a running mate who embodies competence, conviction, and the cleanest record positions the right to win back Brazil in 2026. The base demands strength and loyalty — choose wisely, without unnecessary vulnerabilities.
Would you like any adjustments to the tone, length, or emphasis on Luiz Philippe?


