OPINION: Alcolumbre’s Political Poker: A Centrão Survivor Betting on the Right’s Rise—Don’t Get Played
As Brazil barrels toward the decisive 2026 elections, Senate President Davi Alcolumbre is playing a high-stakes hand of political poker. This isn’t a principled stand against Lula’s agenda or a genuine conversion to conservative values. It’s a calculated maneuver by a seasoned Centrão operator to save his own political skin as the tides turn against the PT establishment.
Alcolumbre recently helped engineer the stunning Senate rejection of Lula’s Supreme Federal Court nominee Jorge Messias—the first time a presidential pick for the STF has been blocked in over 130 years. He worked the votes behind the scenes, even predicting the exact margin on a hot mic, leaving the Planalto Palace humiliated. Now he’s sending signals to opposition senators: he’ll keep that STF seat vacant until after the October 2026 vote and may allow long-stalled impeachment proceedings against activist justices to move forward in 2027. The price? Support for his own re-election as Senate president.
This is textbook Brasília survivalism. For years, Alcolumbre has quietly buried those same impeachment requests when it was convenient. He is no ideological fighter against judicial overreach or censorship—he’s a pragmatic deal-maker who reads the polls and feels the ground shifting. Lula’s government is stumbling on economic delivery and institutional trust. Public frustration with STF excesses runs deep. Conservative and center-right forces are mobilizing for a potential breakthrough. By creating friction now, Alcolumbre positions himself as the indispensable “institutionalist” who can deliver—or withhold—depending on who wins next year. He wants credits with the right if the opposition surges, while keeping a back channel open to Lula if the PT machine grinds out another victory.
Conservatives must not fall for the bait. This poker game is designed to fragment the right, drain energy into short-term tactical wins, and distract from the real objective: building a strong legislative bench and winning the presidency in 2026. Chasing Alcolumbre’s whispers risks repeating old mistakes—celebrating false dawns while the left quietly lines up alliances, pours resources into key races, and prepares to shield its allies in the judiciary.
The path forward demands discipline. The right should exploit the opening—pressuring for genuine accountability on the STF and blocking rushed nominations—but never confuse a Centrão survivor’s self-preservation with partnership. Focus relentlessly on the issues that matter to Brazilian families: public security, economic freedom, inflation control, and restoring institutional balance. Let Alcolumbre’s actions, not his signals, reveal where he truly stands.
Lula and the PT are methodically preparing for the next Congress because they understand the stakes. Patriots must match that strategic focus with eyes wide open. Alcolumbre sees the storm coming and is hedging his bets. The right should navigate it with unity, principle, and unwavering commitment to real change—not temporary deals from professional survivors. The 2026 verdict will shape Brazil’s future. Don’t let the poker table distract from the prize.


