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    Home » Lula’s Decree Power Grab: Bypassing Congress to Silence Dissent Online
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    Lula’s Decree Power Grab: Bypassing Congress to Silence Dissent Online

    HotspotorlandoNewsBy HotspotorlandoNews21 de March de 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
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    Lula’s Decree Power Grab: Bypassing Congress to Silence Dissent Online

    By Hotspotnews

    In yet another brazen display of executive overreach, the Lula administration is preparing to impose sweeping new controls on social media platforms through presidential decrees—sidestepping a gridlocked Congress entirely. João Brant, the Secretary of Digital Policies at Secom (the government’s powerful communication arm), made the stunning admission in a March 19, 2026, interview with Poder360: since lawmakers won’t pass broad new internet regulation laws like the stalled “Fake News” bill, the government will simply dust off existing statutes, lean on recent Supreme Court rulings, and enforce its agenda administratively.

    This isn’t about protecting children or combating genuine harm, as the official line claims. It’s a calculated move to consolidate power over the digital public square ahead of the critical 2026 elections. Brant openly boasted that decrees are coming “in the coming weeks,” with full implementation targeted by year’s end. The tools? Expanded platform liability under a retooled Article 19 of the Marco Civil da Internet (thanks to STF decisions), plus the freshly rolled-out ECA Digital framework, which Lula signed into effect just days earlier.

    On paper, ECA Digital sounds noble: age verification, bans on addictive features like infinite scroll for minors, restrictions on harmful content targeting kids. Who could argue with shielding children from exploitation? But conservatives see the Trojan horse clearly. These “protections” hand unelected bureaucrats—and potentially politicized agencies like the ANPD—the keys to demand ever-broader content removals, algorithmic tweaks, and user data sharing under vague pretexts of “harm prevention” or fighting an “epidemic” of online gender violence.

    The real agenda becomes obvious when you connect the dots. The government has repeatedly pushed for rapid takedowns of content deemed threatening to “democracy,” sovereignty, or public order—categories elastic enough to ensnare sharp political criticism, conservative voices, or inconvenient facts. By bypassing Congress, Lula’s team avoids messy public debate, recorded votes, and the risk of opposition amendments that might preserve free expression. Instead, they govern by fiat: one signature, and platforms must comply or face escalating penalties.

    This is textbook authoritarian creep. When democratic institutions won’t bend to your will, you simply declare the old rules sufficient and reinterpret them until they serve your purposes. Free speech isn’t collateral damage here—it’s the target. Brazilian conservatives, already battered by judicial and executive pressure on dissent, now face a digital dragnet operated from the Planalto Palace.

    The stakes couldn’t be higher. With elections looming, controlling the flow of information online is the ultimate electoral advantage. If platforms are forced to preemptively censor to avoid fines or liability, conservative voices—already labeled “disinformation” by the establishment—will be the first to feel the squeeze.

    Brazil deserves better than rule by decree. The public square belongs to the people, not to a government frustrated by legislative checks and balances. Congress must reassert itself, the judiciary must scrutinize these power grabs, and citizens must demand transparency. Otherwise, the internet that once amplified freedom in Brazil will become just another tool of state control. The clock is ticking—before the decrees drop and the censorship machine roars to life.

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