Judicial Tyranny Exposed: Moraes’ Desperate Bid to Cling to Power While Crushing Conservative Voices
By Hotspotnews
In the twisted theater of Brazilian politics, where the rule of law bends to the whims of the powerful, Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes has once again revealed himself as the architect of selective justice. His latest maneuver—reviving a long-buried corruption probe against Gilberto Kassab, the PSD’s national president—smacks of nothing less than political persecution designed to silence dissent and protect a crumbling leftist establishment. Conservatives across Brazil are rightly outraged: this isn’t about upholding the Constitution; it’s about weaponizing the judiciary to kneecap potential rivals ahead of the 2026 elections.
Let’s recap the farce. Back in 2023, the São Paulo Electoral Court wisely archived the case against Kassab, finding no credible evidence in the tired allegations of bribes from JBS, money laundering, and illegal campaign financing. Even the STF had previously kicked it downstairs, acknowledging it didn’t merit their exalted attention. Fast-forward to March 2025, and Moraes magically yanks it back under an expanded interpretation of privileged forum rules—rules that seem to expand or contract based on who’s in the crosshairs. No new evidence, no fresh witnesses, just a timely resurrection coinciding with Kassab’s PSD flexing its muscles as a centrist force that dares to court conservative alliances.
Why Kassab? Because he’s no Lula loyalist. As the PSD swells with governors like Ronaldo Caiado, Eduardo Leite, and Ratinho Jr., Kassab has positioned his party as a “third way”—a moderate alternative to the radical left’s grip on power. Whispers of amnesty for January 8 patriots, flirtations with center-right heavyweights like Tarcísio de Freitas, and even talks of backing independent runs have made him a threat. Moraes, ever the guardian of the status quo, responds with lawfare: dredge up old skeletons to intimidate, coerce, and remind everyone who’s boss. It’s the same playbook used against Bolsonaro supporters—censor, investigate, silence.
But the hypocrisy runs deeper, and it’s exploding in Moraes’ face. While he plays avenging angel against conservatives, his own family is mired in the Banco Master scandal—a R$129 million fraud web tied directly to his wife’s law firm. Contracts bloated with public funds, unexplained wealth, cozy ties to bankrupt empires: this isn’t petty corruption; it’s a betrayal of public trust at the highest levels. Instead of stepping aside for an impartial probe, Moraes launches secret investigations into the very tax authorities and financial watchdogs exposing him. Deflection at its finest—expose everyone else’s “dirty laundry” to bury your own. He’s scrambling to rebrand as the incorruptible crusader, but conservatives know better: this is a desperate man clinging to robes stained with self-interest.
And Kassab? Reports suggest he’s bowing out of a presidential bid, eyeing the vice slot on a ticket with Tarcísio or another conservative-friendly face. Is it strategy or surrender? In a system rigged by judicial overlords, who can blame him? The PSD’s pivot—uniting governors and rejecting polarization—offered hope for real change, a return to fiscal responsibility, family values, and national sovereignty. But under Moraes’ shadow, even kingmakers must tread carefully, lest they join the ranks of the persecuted.
This assault on Kassab is an assault on all conservatives. It erodes faith in institutions, chills free speech, and rigs the game for the left’s perpetual rule. Brazil’s judiciary was meant to protect liberty, not serve as a tool for authoritarian control. As 2026 looms, true patriots must rally: demand accountability, reject this judicial dictatorship, and reclaim our nation from those who twist justice for power. Moraes may think he’s changing the narrative, but the Brazilian people see the truth—and they won’t forget. The fight for conservative principles—law, order, and freedom—has never been more urgent.


