Caracas Secrets: Did Venezuela Fund Brazil’s Lula?
By Hotspotnews

 

Deep in Latin American politics, dark deals happen behind closed doors. A key figure from Venezuela’s failing government is now talking. Hugo “El Pollo” Carvajal was once a top spy for the Chavistas. Now he’s a U.S. informant. He’s claiming Venezuela’s socialist leaders sent dirty money to help left-wing politicians across the region. This includes Brazil’s President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva and his Workers’ Party (PT). The funding went on for more than 15 years.

Carvajal first said this in a 2021 letter. He wrote it while in jail in Spain. He wanted to avoid being sent to the U.S. for drug charges. He said Venezuela’s state oil company, PDVSA, sent millions of dollars. Some came from drug sales and bad oil deals. This money went to campaigns for Lula in Brazil, the Kirchners in Argentina, Evo Morales in Bolivia, and Gustavo Petro in Colombia. It helped build a wave of left-wing governments in Latin America during the 2000s.

Now in 2025, Carvajal’s words have fresh attention. He was sent to New York in 2023 after hiding for years. In June, he admitted guilt to charges of narco-terrorism, drug smuggling, and arms dealing. To get a lighter sentence, he’s sharing secrets with U.S. officials. He talks about drug routes with FARC rebels and Venezuela’s leaders. Just three days ago, on October 20, Brazilian journalist Elisa Robson got an exclusive electronic interview with him from his U.S. jail cell. The chat was watched over by American authorities for safety. Carvajal stuck to his story and went further. He said he has real proof—like bank records and ledgers—that he’s giving to prosecutors. He called Lula “as criminal as Nicolás Maduro” and described a full “narco-left” web that used PDVSA as a secret bank for socialist causes. Robson, who’s chased this story for years, sounded rock-solid in her report. She called it a big win for truth, especially after past dismissals as fake news.

Argentina’s President Javier Milei jumped on this last week. He called it proof of a “narco-left” group hiding as progressives. In Brazil, right-wing leaders and online voices are calling for probes into Lula’s campaign money. It reminds people of old scandals like Odebrecht.

From a conservative point of view, this is more than gossip. It’s a big warning about bad ideas in the region. Lula’s PT party was once seen as fair and good for people. But scandals have hurt it badly. In 2014, the Lava Jato investigation found huge bribes from government contracts. Lula went to prison but got out in 2019 on a legal trick. If Carvajal is right, it’s worse: foreign money from a dictatorship that wrecked Venezuela. That country has sky-high prices, millions fleeing, and gangs running wild. That’s the system they say helped Lula.

Lula’s team says it’s all lies. They call it old fake news from a guy who wants a deal. Brazilian checkers looked at the 2021 letter. They found no proof—no bank records or emails, just his story. The U.S. Justice Department didn’t mention Brazil in their announcement. A Spanish court dropped a similar case about funding a Spanish party in 2022. No hard facts yet from the new interview. Carvajal’s sentencing is on October 29. Any new info might stay secret for now.

But conservatives say: no proof doesn’t mean it’s false. Especially with people who have shady pasts. Lula won in 2022 with help from unions, farmers, and friends abroad. He promised to bring people together after Bolsonaro. But questions about outside help—from China or Cuba—never went away. If even part of this is true, it could lead to big investigations in Brazil. It might hurt trade groups and push for stronger U.S. penalties on Venezuela’s dirty money.

This story shows a key conservative idea: socialism from tough leaders always leads to lies and force. Venezuela was once the richest in South America. Now it’s a mess because of takeovers, crushed opponents, and 7 million people leaving. Sending that model with secret cash? It’s what happens when government gets too much power.

As Carvajal heads to court in New York, everyone is watching. Will he name more people or add details? Or will it fade away? For now, the claim is like bad air in Caracas: heavy and hard to ignore. Brazil’s young democracy needs clear answers after years of fights. If Lula did nothing wrong, show the papers. If he did, people in Brazil and across the Americas—from Rio’s slums to Argentina’s plains—deserve honest votes, not drug money.

Truth isn’t about sides. It’s the fix for power’s poisons. Until we know more, conservatives will keep pushing: Who paid for the left’s big wins in Latin America? And what did it cost everyone?

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