Damares Alves: From Bolsonaro’s Cheerleader to the Senate’s Polite Spectator?
By Hotspotnews
Damares Alves – the evangelical powerhouse who once thundered from the pulpit of power as Brazil’s Minister of Women, Family, and Human Rights under Jair Bolsonaro. Remember her? The one who could rally crowds with fiery speeches about family values, divine justice, and standing firm against the “leftist machine”? She was Bolsonaro’s right-hand woman (literally, in some photos), a symbol of unyielding loyalty in a sea of political sharks. But oh, how the mighty have… well, not exactly fallen, but certainly sidestepped into the shadows. And we’re all left scratching our heads: How did she flip like this? Could it be that the Bolsonaro spotlight – or perhaps Michelle’s glamorous glow – has dimmed, leaving our dear senator to fend for her own relevance?
Let’s rewind, shall we? It’s January 2026, and former President Bolsonaro is languishing in a PF cell in Brasília, his health reportedly crumbling faster than a poorly baked brigadeiro. Surgeries, a nasty fall in his cell – the man’s pushing 70, for heaven’s sake. A group of 22 senators, mostly from the PL and PP camps, band together like a righteous posse and fire off a petition to STF Minister Alexandre de Moraes for humanitarian house arrest. It’s a bold move, a collective cry against what they call political persecution. Bolsonaro himself, looking frail in a hospital bed video, thanks them profusely. Michelle chimes in with gratitude. The base erupts in cheers for these “true patriots.”
But wait – where’s Damares? The woman who once declared Bolsonaro’s right to house arrest as not mercy, but *law*? The one who publicly decried his treatment as a human rights violation? Her name is conspicuously absent from that list. Poof! Gone like yesterday’s viral meme. Instead, she’s off playing institutional chess as head of the Senate’s Human Rights Commission (CDH). Requesting “inspections” of his cell conditions, filing polite protocols to the very judge who’s keeping him locked up. Oh, how *concerned* she must be, typing up those formal letters while her old allies charge ahead with actual petitions.
Is this flip? Or just a savvy pivot? One can’t help but wonder if the Bolsonaro machine – once a ticket to endless headlines and adoring crowds – has lost its luster. Jair’s behind bars, Michelle’s busy with her own spotlight (bless her influencer heart), and suddenly Damares is cozying up to cross-aisle colleagues like Eliziane Gama. Supporting bills that some die-hard bolsonaristas label as “feminist leftist traps”? Blocking critics on X like they’re pesky mosquitoes? My, my, the firebrand has turned bureaucrat.
Don’t get me wrong – I’m *concerned*. Deeply, sarcastically concerned. Is this the same Damares who fought tooth and nail for conservative causes? Or has the Senate’s air-conditioned halls cooled her revolutionary zeal? Perhaps without Bolsonaro’s rallies or Michelle’s photo ops, she’s realized the real power lies in committee rooms, not in signing doomed petitions that scream “opposition” a bit too loudly. After all, why risk the backlash when you can send a nicely worded request and call it “fiscal oversight”?
Bolsonaro’s base is fuming, of course. Posts on X are ablaze with accusations of “cowardice” and “theater.” And who can blame them? They expected her to lead the charge, not audit the prison plumbing. If this is her strategy – smart, institutional, oh-so-pragmatic – it’s leaving a bitter taste. Has she flipped for good, chasing a broader appeal in a post-Bolsonaro era? Or is it just survival in Brazil’s cutthroat politics, where yesterday’s hero is today’s footnote?
Whatever the reason, Damares, we’re watching. With concern. And a hefty dose of sarcasm. Because if the spotlight’s moved on, who’s left to illuminate the path for the faithful?

