ALCOLUMBRE’S EMPIRE OF SILENCE CRUMBLES: IMPEACHMENT FIRE NOW RAGING TOWARD THE SENATE PRESIDENCY

By Hotspotnews

January 31, 2026 – The Brazilian political volcano has erupted.
What began as a slow-burning pension fraud scandal has metastasized overnight into the most serious existential threat to Davi Alcolumbre’s career since he first seized the Senate gavel.

A tidal wave of more than 230 parliamentary signatures—delivered like a guillotine blade—now demands the immediate installation of a CPMI to investigate Banco Master, the financial black hole accused of orchestrating one of the largest INSS-directed loan scams in recent memory. Hundreds of millions of reais allegedly vanished from retirees’ pockets while the institution was showered with public fund investments, including very substantial sums from the Amapá previdência fund (Amprev) that Alcolumbre presided over and where his own brother sat on the governing council.

The protocol is crystal clear and merciless: once a CPMI request reaches the legally required number of signatures, the President of the Senate **must** read it on the floor within a short, non-negotiable window. Failure to do so is not politics-as-usual.
It is, in the language of the Brazilian Constitution and precedents set during multiple previous impeachment processes, a **crime of responsibility**.

Deputy Carlos Jordy did not mince words:

“If Davi Alcolumbre refuses to read this request he will commit an unmistakable crime of responsibility. Impeachment becomes not a possibility—it becomes inevitable.”

The math is brutal.
In an election year already soaked in gasoline, congressional centrists, government base leaders and even some opposition figures are sweating profusely at the mere thought of a multi-month CPMI spectacle that would drag before television cameras:

– Central Bank directors who authorized (or failed to stop) Banco Master’s final months of operation
– Supreme Court ministers whose families and offices had eyebrow-raising financial or contractual relationships with the institution
– Former Justice Ministers whose relatives pocketed seven-figure monthly consulting fees from the same bank
– Scores of politicians from virtually every major party who either received campaign support traced to the group or whose allies sat on related boards

The fear inside the Centrão is no longer abstract: a functioning CPMI could become the 2026 version of the mensalão or Lava Jato drip-feed—except this time the images are fresh, the victims are pensioners, and the election is less than twelve months away.

Alcolumbre’s current posture—total silence, no reading of the request, no public position—has only poured jet fuel on the inferno. Every hour he sits on the document is interpreted by growing sectors of Congress and the street as active obstruction. Social media is already flooded with montages superimposing his face on a giant padlock. The hashtag #ImpeachmentAlcolumbre crossed the one-million mark in under 36 hours.

Veteran observers inside the Senate whisper two parallel scenarios now being war-gamed in private:

1. The controlled demolition
Alcolumbre eventually reads the request, the CPMI is installed, but its scope is surgically narrowed by friendly rapporteur and a Centrão majority so that it dies of natural causes after six months of noise and zero indictments.

2. The uncontrolled collapse
He continues to stonewall → opposition + dissatisfied centrists file an impeachment request against the Senate President → enough signatures are gathered in the Chamber → the process lands on Rodrigo Pacheco’s desk in a twisted irony only Brazilian politics can produce.

No one believes scenario 1 is still realistic without massive concessions. The street temperature is rising too fast. Pensioner associations have already announced national marches. Evangelical benches—normally reliable Centrão allies—are receiving daily videos of elderly church members weeping over vanished consignado loans. The moral geometry has shifted.

History is unkind to presidents of the Senate who become the face of obstruction in an election cycle.
Renan Calheiros survived many storms—but never one this perfectly timed, this emotionally radioactive, and this closely linked to his personal and family financial orbit.

The clock is ticking.
Either Davi Alcolumbre opens the valve and lets the beast loose under controlled conditions, or the beast tears the valve off the wall.

Right now, most insiders believe he still thinks he can wait it out.
Most insiders also believe that is the single worst strategic calculation he has made in his entire career.

The volcano is no longer rumbling.
It is erupting.

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