Lula’s Government and the Shameless INSS Heist
Aiming Brazil’s elderly and poor
By Hotspotorlando News
In a move that reeks of impunity, the Procuradoria-Geral da República (PGR) has shamefully archived a request to investigate former Social Security Minister Carlos Lupi and the current leadership of Brazil’s Social Security system over a massive fraud scandal at the Instituto Nacional do Seguro Social (INSS). The decision, spearheaded by PGR head Paulo Gonet, dismisses allegations of prevarication despite overwhelming evidence of misconduct, leaving Brazil’s elderly—those who worked tirelessly to build this nation—vulnerable to a government that appears complicit in robbing them blind.
The scandal centers on unauthorized deductions from retirees’ and pensioners’ benefits, a scheme that has siphoned off billions from the INSS. Senator Damares Alves, a staunch defender of justice, filed a formal request for an investigation, pointing to Lupi, current Minister Wolney Queiroz, and former INSS president Alessandro Stefanutto as key figures who failed to act despite being alerted to the fraud as early as June 2023. These illicit deductions, which reportedly cost the system over R$ 6 billion, were allowed to continue for nearly ten months before any action was taken, and only then after a court order forced the issue. This is not mere negligence—it’s a betrayal of the public trust.
Adding fuel to the fire, reports have surfaced that a syndicate linked to President Lula’s brother has seen its contributions skyrocket by a staggering 414% through these illegal deductions. This explosive growth raises serious questions about who is truly benefiting from this scheme. While Brazil’s elderly struggle to survive on meager pensions, the Lula administration appears to be turning a blind eye to a racket that enriches its allies at the expense of the vulnerable. The PGR’s refusal to investigate only deepens suspicions of a cover-up, shielding powerful figures from accountability.
Lupi, who resigned amid the scandal’s fallout, had the audacity to call the accusations a “dirty attack” by the right. But the numbers don’t lie, and neither does the suffering of retirees who have seen their hard-earned benefits plundered. The PGR’s decision to shelve the investigation, citing insufficient evidence of “individualized conduct,” is a flimsy excuse that insults the intelligence of every Brazilian. If a R$ 6 billion hole in the INSS isn’t material enough to warrant scrutiny, what is? The claim that prevarication requires proof of personal gain is a convenient dodge when the system itself seems rigged to protect the guilty.
This is not just a failure of oversight; it’s a shameless con orchestrated under the Lula government’s watch. The elderly, who deserve dignity and security in their twilight years, are instead being robbed to pad the coffers of a select few. The PGR’s inaction sends a clear message: justice is selective, and those connected to Lula’s inner circle are untouchable. Meanwhile, a Commission of Parliamentary Inquiry (CPMI) looms as the last hope to expose this travesty, with Damares vowing to pursue the truth. Brazil deserves better than a government that preys on its most vulnerable while hiding behind bureaucratic excuses. The elderly deserve respect, not robbery. Shame on Lula’s administration for allowing this disgrace to fester.

