Brazil’s Postal Service: A Taxpayer-Funded Cesspool of Corruption and Incompetence
April 8, 2025, Hotspotorlando News. Here we go again, folks—another day, another scandal exposing the rotting underbelly of Brazil’s state-run enterprises. The Brazilian postal service, Empresa Brasileira de Correios e Telégrafos, is back in the spotlight, and it’s not for delivering your mail on time. No, this bloated bureaucratic behemoth is drowning in a cesspool of corruption, financial mismanagement, and socialist ineptitude that should have every hardworking Brazilian taxpayer boiling with rage.
Let’s start with the numbers, because they don’t lie—unlike the bureaucrats running this show. The Postalis fund, the pension scheme for Correios workers, has racked up a staggering 2 billion reais deficit under the Lula administration since 2023. That’s right—2 BILLION. And who’s footing the bill? You guessed it: the poor saps who actually pay their taxes, while the postal workers’ union cries crocodile tears and the government throws more of our money into the fire. Meanwhile, the service itself bleeds clients—losing 500 million reais as businesses flee to private competitors who don’t lose packages or “accidentally” forget to deliver them for weeks.
And then there’s the Remessa Conforme program, a brainchild of Lula’s economic wizards that slashed postal revenue by another 530 million reais in 2023 alone. Supposedly designed to “modernize” tax collection on international shipments, it’s instead gutted the Correios’ bottom line, proving once again that government meddling only makes things worse. But don’t worry, comrades—while your letters sit in limbo, the apparatchiks in Brasília are busy cooking the books and hiding debts that could top 1 billion reais, as uncovered in past audits.
This isn’t new. Back in 2019, the Federal Police busted a scheme where Correios insiders and crooked businessmen siphoned off 13 million reais, trading cushy jobs for up to 250,000 reais a month. And that’s just the tip of the iceberg—furtos (thefts) cost the agency 201.7 million reais in 2016 alone, with packages vanishing like magic under the watchful eye of a workforce that’s either complicit or incompetent. Greves—strikes—pile on the chaos, leaving Brazilians stranded while union bosses flex their muscle. Yet somehow, the left still clings to this dinosaur like it’s a sacred cow of “public service.”
Enough is enough. The Correios is a black hole of inefficiency and cronyism, propped up by a government that loves nothing more than wasting your money to appease its voting base. Privatization isn’t just an option—it’s a moral imperative. Look at the United States, where Elon Musk is calling for the USPS to go private because it’s a bloated mess—Brazil should take notes. Every day we let this scandal-ridden relic limp along is another day the Brazilian people are robbed blind by a system that prioritizes political hacks over progress.
Conservatives have been screaming this from the rooftops for years: state-run enterprises are a playground for corruption and a slap in the face to free-market principles. Lula’s socialist circus wants you to believe this is “fixable” with more regulations and handouts. Wake up, Brazil—it’s time to cut the cord, sell this disaster to the highest bidder, and let the private sector do what it does best: deliver results. Anything less is a betrayal of every citizen who’s tired of funding this farce.
Who is who in the Correios scandal of all times
These names surface across historical scandals (e.g., 2005 bribery, 2019 job-selling schemes) and current conservative critiques of Correios under Lula. The article’s focuses on systemic issues—debt, thefts (201.7 million reais in 2016), strikes—rather than a single 2025 event. Without a breaking 2025 scandal pinned down, this reflects the likely suspects based on past patterns and today’s leadership.
Fabiano Silva dos Santos
The current president of Correios, appointed under President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s administration in 2023. He’s a central figure in the modern context, criticized by conservative voices for alleged political cronyism and mismanagement. Posts on X have accused him of hiring questionable associates like Júlio Vicente Lopes and Maurício Marcellini, both linked to financial irregularities at Postalis and Funcef (another pension fund), though these claims remain unverified in official records as of now.
– Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva (Lula)
As Brazil’s president since January 2023, he’s implicated indirectly by conservatives for appointing Fabiano and overseeing a government accused of perpetuating inefficiencies in state-run entities like Correios. His administration’s policies, like the Remessa Conforme program, are blamed for revenue losses.
– Gleisi Hoffmann:
A prominent PT (Workers’ Party) leader and senator, often cited in conservative critiques for her past influence over Postalis during her tenure in Lula’s earlier governments. X posts, like one from @MecenasFelipe, claim she and her husband, Paulo Bernardo (a former minister), mismanaged the fund, contributing to its 2 billion reais deficit—though these are partisan allegations without recent court substantiation.
– Paulo Bernardo:
Gleisi’s ex husband and former Communications Minister (2005–2011), linked to Postalis oversight during a period of alleged mismanagement. Historical probes, like the 2019 Federal Police operation, tied him to broader PT corruption scandals, though direct postal involvement is less clear.
– Júlio Vicente Lopes and Maurício Marcellini: o
Named in X posts as Fabiano’s appointees to Correios’ advisory roles. Both were reportedly involved with Postalis and Funcef during their financial downturns, facing accusations of illicit dealings, though specifics on their current roles or legal status in 2025 are murky without official updates.
– Roberto Jefferson: A former Labor Party leader and lawmaker implicated in a 2005 Correios corruption scandal. Veja magazine exposed a scheme where he and Mauricio Marinho rigged contract bids, captured on video. Jefferson’s case is historical but often cited as a symbol of entrenched postal corruption.
– Mauricio Marinho: Former head of contracting at Correios, caught in the 2005 scandal accepting bribes on tape. He was removed after the exposé, marking an early public blow to Correios’ reputation.
-Bolsonaro made a difference
Jair Bolsonaro Though not directly involved in current scandals, the former president (2019–2022) shifted Correios toward privatization talks in 2019, a move conservatives laud as a fix for corruption—contrasting with Lula’s approach. His administration’s stance informs the article’s privatization push.

