American Justice Rolls In: Lula’s Humiliation Deepens Under Bessent’s Sanctions
By Hotspotnews
On the sun-baked streets of Brasília, where political vendettas simmer like a pot left too long on the fire, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva is learning a hard truth: what goes around in the halls of power comes around with the force of a Trump tariff. Just three years after Lula’s narrow 2022 election victory—tainted by whispers of federal police meddling on voting day and his own scrubbed corruption convictions—the tables have flipped in a way that conservatives can only describe as divine payback. The man who once gloated over Jair Bolsonaro’s ousting, branding him a threat to democracy, now finds himself the global punchline, his regime battered by U.S. sanctions that strike at the heart of his judicial enforcers.
It was a spectacle of leftist triumph back then: Bolsonaro, Brazil’s bulldog against socialism and globalist overreach, defeated by a razor-thin margin and swiftly hounded into the shadows. Lula’s Supreme Court, weaponized under Justice Alexandre de Moraes, slapped the former president with a 27-year sentence this month for an alleged coup plot—a case conservatives dismiss as a blatant witch hunt, mirroring the lawfare flung at Donald Trump. House arrest, an ankle bracelet, and a muzzle on his social media? It was humiliation served with a side of authoritarian flair, all while Lula preached “reunification” from his perch of power.
Enter September 22, 2025, and the Trump administration’s response—a masterstroke of conservative realpolitik that has Lula choking on his own rhetoric. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, unflinching in his defense of free elections and human rights, announced fresh Global Magnitsky sanctions on Viviane Barci de Moraes, the wife of the very judge who orchestrated Bolsonaro’s downfall. Her assets frozen, her U.S. dealings severed, Viviane now joins her husband on America’s naughty list, targeted for providing “material support” to de Moraes’ reign of censorship and arbitrary detentions. In one fell swoop, the U.S. revoked visas for six more Brazilian heavyweights, including Solicitor General Jorge Messias, cutting them off from the dollar-dominated world that keeps economies humming.
Bessent didn’t stop at the announcement; he delivered a warning shot that echoes like thunder over the Amazon. “Additional Brazilian officials could be sanctioned if necessary,” he told reporters, adding a chilling kicker for Lula’s enablers: any financial institution tangling with these sanctioned figures “should consider those actions carefully.” It’s not bluster—it’s a blueprint for escalation, with secondary sanctions lurking like a storm cloud over Brazil’s banks. This follows July’s one-two punch: 50% tariffs on Brazilian exports like soy and steel, explicitly tied to the “insidious attacks on free elections,” and initial sanctions on de Moraes himself for his “oppressive campaign” against conservatives, journalists, and platforms like X.
For conservatives, this is the foreign policy we’ve craved—strength without apology, loyalty to allies like Bolsonaro over kowtowing to leftist cabals. Trump, who sees his own January 6 saga reflected in Brazil’s farce, has made it personal: “LEAVE BOLSONARO ALONE!” he blasted on Truth Social, rallying a base that views Lula’s regime as a bully pulpit for election meddling and speech suppression. Eduardo Bolsonaro, the ex-president’s son and D.C. whisperer, lobbied Bessent hard, and now the payoff is in: a pressure cooker forcing Brazil’s Congress to scramble for an amnesty bill, even as de Moraes’ court digs in for a constitutional brawl.
Lula’s retort? A fumbling mix of outrage and olive branches that fools no one. “Unacceptable,” he fumed, decrying the sanctions as an “attack on Brazilian sovereignty” and vowing solidarity with de Moraes, whom he shields like a favored uncle. Yet he’s hedging bets, floating trade talks while his economy bleeds: tariffs gutting revenues, banks tiptoeing around U.S. red lines, and approval ratings slumping toward 40% amid whispers of a 2026 wipeout. His international cheerleaders—Macron, Sánchez—offer crickets, spooked by Trump’s tariff hammer. Even on X, the conservative tide surges: users mock Lula’s “Yankee imperialism” hypocrisy, with one quipping that Bessent’s moves “shield Trump’s coup-plot buddies while Brazil fights real democracy-killers.” Another laments the irony: “Lula humiliated Bolsonaro, now he’s eating crow.”
This saga isn’t mere score-settling; it’s a lesson in accountability. Lula’s 2022 playbook—annul his own graft trials, unleash federal cops on election day, stack the courts—backfired spectacularly when America, under Trump, decided enough was enough. De Moraes’ tactics, from raiding opponents to blacking out X for weeks, aren’t justice; they’re the stuff of tin-pot tyrants, and Bessent’s sanctions call the bluff. As Brazilian lawmakers push amnesty and institutions weigh compliance, the choice is stark: cling to Lula’s vendetta and court economic Armageddon, or grant Bolsonaro reprieve and rejoin the free world.
Conservatives worldwide raise a glass to this reversal. The wheel of power turns, and today it crushes the humiliator. Lula may posture at the UN, but back home, his empire wobbles. True leadership earns respect through resolve, not rigged courts or foreign pity. With Bessent’s warning ringing out, Brazil’s elite must decide: side with sovereignty’s sham or America’s unyielding standard. For the right, it’s vindication—humiliate at your peril, because Uncle Sam remembers, and he packs a punch.
photo by Reuters

