Fux Drops a Bombshell at the STF: “If Rio Politicians Go to Hell, They’ll Be Accompanied by High Authorities!”
By Hotspotnews
In a jaw-dropping moment that has Brazil’s political world buzzing, Supreme Federal Court (STF) Minister Luiz Fux unleashed a fiery defense of his home state of Rio de Janeiro during a tense plenary session on April 9, 2026. What started as a dry debate over whether the state’s next “tampão” (interim) governor should be chosen by direct popular vote or indirectly by the state legislature (Alerj) quickly exploded into a raw, no-holds-barred clash over corruption, hypocrisy, and regional pride.
The session centered on the power vacuum in Rio following the resignation of former Governor Cláudio Castro amid looming ineligibility issues. Ministers like Gilmar Mendes, Alexandre de Moraes, and Flávio Dino painted a grim picture of institutional “degradation” in the state. They voiced “perplexity” at the chaos, pointing fingers at the Alerj legislature, alleged ties to illegal gambling (“jogo do bicho”), and a broader sense of political rot that has left the Palácio Guanabara in turmoil—with the president of the Rio Court of Justice currently serving as interim governor.
Enter Fux, the Rio native and relator in one of the key cases. Clearly fed up with what he saw as selective outrage and blanket Rio-bashing, he interrupted the pile-on with a passionate counterstrike. Fux reminded his colleagues that corruption scandals aren’t some Rio-exclusive disease. He rattled off major national bombshells: the Mensalão scandal, the sprawling Lava Jato investigation, massive INSS frauds, and the controversial Banco Master case that has touched high-level figures across the country.
“There are good politicians from Rio in the Federal Chamber—excellent ones,” Fux declared. Then came the mic-drop line that lit up social media: “So if these politicians have to go to hell, they will be accompanied by high authorities.”
The chamber fell into stunned silence before the clip went viral. “VÉIIIIIIIII O Fux meteu o loko!!!!!” screamed one popular reaction, capturing the explosive energy. Fux wasn’t just defending his state—he was calling out what many saw as hypocrisy in the very court where past scandals involving powerful figures have been judged (or not).
The underlying battle was no less dramatic. Cristiano Zanin pushed hard for direct elections, arguing the people of Rio deserve a say in who fills the vacancy. Fux and several others—including André Mendonça, Nunes Marques, and Cármen Lúcia—leaned toward indirect voting by Alerj deputies, citing tight timelines, costs, and legal technicalities around resignations versus cassations. By the time Flávio Dino requested a “vista” (more time to review, tying it to a pending TSE ruling on Castro’s ineligibility), the score sat at 4-1 in favor of the indirect route, though the full court (with votes still pending from Moraes, Gilmar, Toffoli, and Fachin) left the outcome hanging.
But the real story wasn’t the procedural wrangling—it was Fux’s unfiltered outburst exposing the STF’s own contradictions. In a country where Lava Jato exposed systemic graft reaching the highest levels, and where “high authorities” have long danced through scandals, Fux’s words landed like a grenade. Rio politicians aren’t saints, but neither is the rest of the Brazilian elite, his message screamed.
Social media erupted. Supporters hailed Fux as a bold truth-teller taking on the establishment. Critics called it deflection. Either way, the Rio native turned a routine session into political theater, reminding everyone that when it comes to pointing fingers at corruption, the mirror reflects far and wide.
As the judgment resumes, one thing is clear: Fux’s hell-bound jab has ignited fresh debate about selective justice, regional biases, and whether Brazil’s top court can ever escape the scandals it claims to judge. The STF’s drama continues—but this time, with a Rio-sized fire lit under it.

