Judicial Protectionism: The STF’s Brazen Shield for the Lula Family Must Not Stand

By Hotspotnews

Once again, the Brazilian Supreme Federal Court has demonstrated that when it comes to the powerful, the law bends. Minister Flávio Dino, a longtime ally of the current administration, has unilaterally suspended the Mixed Parliamentary Inquiry Commission’s (CPMI do INSS) decision to break the bank secrecy of Fábio Luís Lula da Silva—better known as “Lulinha,” the president’s eldest son.

The CPMI, formed to investigate one of the largest social security fraud scandals in recent memory, had approved nearly 90 requests to access financial records of individuals and companies suspected of diverting millions from INSS coffers through fake pensions and irregular benefit schemes. Among those named was Lulinha’s marketing firm, LFT Marketing, which reportedly received more than R$1 million in suspicious payments since 2019. The commission’s vote was public, transparent, and followed months of hearings and document analysis.

Yet Minister Dino, in a single stroke on March 4, 2026, declared those requests—including the one targeting the president’s son—insufficiently justified. No detailed public reasoning was offered beyond the vague claim that the commission had not adequately demonstrated “necessity and proportionality.” In practice, this means the STF has once again placed itself as the final gatekeeper, deciding which investigations may touch the first family and which must stop short.

Conservatives across Brazil have every reason to be furious.

This is not about due process. Due process does not mean immunity from scrutiny simply because someone carries the surname Lula. The CPMI was not inventing crimes; it was following the money trail left by a scheme that allegedly robbed retirees and disabled Brazilians of benefits they desperately needed. If the evidence is weak, let the courts decide that after the documents are examined—not before they can even be seen.

What we are witnessing is textbook selective justice: swift and aggressive when the target is a political opponent, glacial and protective when the name on the file belongs to the ruling clan. The same Supreme Court that has enthusiastically endorsed far-reaching secrecy breaks, telephone intercepts, and asset freezes against conservatives now suddenly discovers constitutional scruples when the spotlight turns toward the president’s own household.

The message could not be clearer: there are two Brazils under this administration—one in which ordinary citizens and opposition figures can have their lives turned upside down in the name of “fighting corruption,” and another in which the powerful enjoy a de facto presumption of untouchability.

This is the very definition of the “two-tiered justice” system that Brazilians were promised would end with the fall of previous governments. Instead, it has been perfected.

Patriotic Brazilians—especially those who still believe in equal treatment under the law—should be outraged. They should demand answers. They should flood congressional offices, social media, and public squares with the simple, undeniable question:

Why is the son of the president above the same level of scrutiny applied to everyone else?

Until that question is answered honestly and transparently, every speech about combating privilege, every sermon on republican values, every promise of a “new Brazil” rings hollow.

The shield has been raised once more. The time has come to tear it down.

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