Lula’s Betrayal Deepens: Domestic Chaos Meets Dangerous Alliances with Iran and Communist China
By Hotspotnews
President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s presidency is unraveling amid deadly floods in Minas Gerais, family corruption scandals, and widespread outrage over his mockery of Christian values. Compounding these failures is his foreign policy disaster: condemning U.S. and Israeli defensive strikes on Iran while deepening Brazil’s entanglement with authoritarian China, effectively selling out national sovereignty and resources to regimes hostile to Western values and freedom.
The southeastern state of Minas Gerais remains gripped by tragedy, with heavy rains triggering catastrophic floods and landslides that have claimed at least 70 lives, left dozens missing, and displaced thousands in hard-hit areas like Juiz de Fora and Ubá. President Lula’s response—visiting the zone, promising federal aid, free housing for victims, and deploying rescue teams—has done little to quell mounting public anger. Residents and local leaders decry the government’s chronic lack of preparedness, inadequate infrastructure defenses, and slow delivery of real help amid blocked roads, destroyed homes, and ongoing suffering. Conservative voices, including Minas Governor Romeu Zema, have lambasted Lula for treating ordinary Brazilians with contempt, especially as recovery drags on and more storms loom.
This humanitarian failure coincides with a broader collapse in Lula’s domestic standing. His approval ratings continue to slide, with recent polls showing government support dipping dangerously low—often below 40% in key surveys—and disapproval surging among evangelicals and working-class voters. The Carnival parade fiasco, which paraded religious symbols in a tribute to Lula, stands out as a deliberate affront to Christian faith, sparking backlash and even legal threats from figures like Zema, who accuses the president of disrespecting believers. Meanwhile, the probe into Lula’s son Lulinha for allegedly diverting millions from the social security system—robbing pensioners and retirees—intensifies, with congressional actions breaching his financial secrecy and demands for detention growing louder as he reportedly lingers abroad.
These scandals expose the rot at the heart of Lula’s Workers’ Party rule, but his foreign policy choices represent an even graver betrayal of Brazil’s interests and values. In the face of escalating Middle East tensions, Lula’s administration has repeatedly condemned U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iranian targets, expressing “grave concern” over actions aimed at curbing Tehran’s aggression and nuclear ambitions. Brazil’s Foreign Ministry has labeled these necessary defensive operations violations of sovereignty and international law, while urging restraint and diplomacy that effectively shields the Iranian regime—a notorious sponsor of terrorism and instability. Lula himself has decried such military responses as threats to global peace, echoing positions that align Brazil with rogue states rather than standing with democratic allies like the United States and Israel. This stance not only isolates Brazil from the West but undermines efforts to prevent nuclear proliferation and terrorism, prioritizing ideological solidarity with dictators over national security and moral clarity.
Equally alarming is Lula’s accelerating coziness with communist China, which conservatives view as a blatant sellout of Brazilian sovereignty. In recent years, Lula and Chinese President Xi Jinping have elevated bilateral ties to a “China-Brazil community with a shared future for a more just world and a more sustainable planet”—a grandiose phrase masking deepening dependency. This includes massive Chinese investments in infrastructure, critical minerals, and energy; trade imbalances favoring Beijing; and strategic alignments through BRICS that diminish U.S. influence. Xi has repeatedly assured Lula of support in “turbulent times,” while Brazil grants visa exemptions to Chinese citizens and opens doors to Belt and Road-style projects. These deals hand over control of key resources—like rare earths and agricultural exports—to a regime that crushes dissent, manipulates markets, and expands authoritarian reach in Latin America.
By prioritizing alliances with China and Iran over traditional Western partnerships, Lula risks turning Brazil into a junior partner in an anti-democratic axis. This not only exposes the nation to economic exploitation and geopolitical vulnerabilities but erodes its independence, all while Lula preaches multipolarity to mask his leftist ideological drift. As he deflects domestic crises with foreign adventures, Brazilians suffer the consequences: weakened alliances, compromised resources, and a leader more loyal to global tyrants than to his own people.
With the 2026 election approaching, Lula clings to narrow leads in fragmented polls against right-wing challengers, but his high rejection rates signal deep discontent. Conservatives must highlight this pattern of failure—from floods mishandled to faith disrespected, from family corruption to selling out to China and shielding Iran—to rally for a return to principled governance: strong national sovereignty, Judeo-Christian values, free markets, and alliances with freedom-loving nations. Brazil cannot afford more of Lula’s dangerous slide toward authoritarian entanglements and domestic neglect. The time for accountability is now.

