Lula’s Hypocrisy on Full Display: Pressuring Congress to Punish Eduardo Bolsonaro While Shielding His Own Cassation Scandals

By Laiz Rodrigues

Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, Brazil’s embattled president, has once again revealed his authoritarian streak and blatant double standardsIn a brazen display of political strong-arming, Lula is reportedly pressuring the Chamber of Deputies to accelerate punitive action against federal deputy Eduardo Bolsonaro, son of former President Jair Bolsonaro. The alleged offense? Eduardo’s vocal criticism of Lula’s government and his alleged involvement in spreading what the left labels as “disinformation.” Lula’s camp is pushing for Eduardo’s cassation—the stripping of his parliamentary mandate—a move that reeks of revenge politics and a desperate bid to silence opposition. But let’s call it what it is: a hypocritical assault on free speech from a man whose own political survival has been propped up by judicial maneuvering and elite impunity.

This isn’t just petty vendetta; it’s a calculated power grab. Sources close to the Planalto Palace indicate that Lula’s allies in the PT (Workers’ Party) and allied blocs are whipping votes in the House Ethics Committee to fast-track an investigation into Eduardo. The pretext? Baseless claims of incitement tied to the January 8, 2023, riots in Brasília, where Bolsonaro supporters stormed government buildings in protest against electoral irregularities. Eduardo, like his father, has denied any role and framed his actions as legitimate dissent. Yet, Lula—ever the defender of his own “cassation” dramas—is all in on this crusade, reportedly phoning key congressmen and deploying cabinet ministers to lobby for swift condemnation. As one anonymous PT insider leaked to conservative outlets like O Antagonista, “The president wants this done before the midterms heat up; it’s about breaking the Bolsonarista spine.”

Defending Cassation: Lula’s Shield for Himself, Sword for Enemies

Lula’s enthusiastic defense of cassating Eduardo Bolsonaro exposes the rot at the heart of his regime. Cassation, for the uninitiated, is the nuclear option in Brazilian politics: it ejects lawmakers from office, often amid corruption charges or ethical breaches. Lula knows this process intimately because he’s danced around it his entire career. Remember Lava Jato? In 2018, Lula himself faced calls for cassation as a former president and PT leader, with evidence piling up of his direct involvement in Petrobras graft schemes. Bribes, triplex apartments, and a countryside ranch—courts convicted him on multiple counts. But did Lula face the music? Hardly. Through relentless appeals, biased judicial interventions, and a Supreme Court packed with his sympathizers, he clawed his way back, annulling convictions on procedural technicalities in 2021. Today, as president, he’s gutted Lava Jato’s independence, firing prosecutors and passing laws to neuter anti-corruption tools like plea deals.

Now, Lula flips the script, championing cassation for Eduardo while shielding his own allies from similar fates. Take the PT’s own scandals: Gleisi Hoffmann, Lula’s party chair and a key congressional ally, dodged cassation probes over undeclared campaign funds. Or recall Dilma Rousseff’s 2016 impeachment—Lula’s handpicked successor—where corruption ties were blatant, yet the PT cried foul and labeled it a “coup.” Lula’s “true colors” here are crystal clear: rules apply to enemies, not friends. By pressuring the House against Eduardo, he’s not upholding democracy; he’s weaponizing institutions to consolidate power, much like the authoritarian tactics he decries in others.

The Broader Assault on Conservative Voices

This episode fits Lula’s pattern of radical intolerance. Since reclaiming the presidency in 2023 amid widespread fraud allegations, his administration has cracked down on Bolsonaro supporters with mass arrests, media censorship pushes, and now targeted cassations. Eduardo Bolsonaro, a fierce defender of conservative values like family, faith, and free markets, represents everything Lula’s socialist agenda loathes. The younger Bolsonaro’s social media savvy has amplified exposés on Lula’s economic mismanagement—skyrocketing inflation, a weakening real, and policies favoring China over Western allies. Cassating him would muzzle a major voice, paving the way for Lula’s PT to dominate discourse unchallenged.

Conservatives must see through the facade. Lula’s pressure tactics aren’t about justice; they’re about survival. With approval ratings languishing below 40% (per Datafolha polls), he’s resorting to Stalinist suppression to cling to power. Eduardo Bolsonaro’s fight is every patriot’s fight—against a regime that preaches equality but practices elite protectionism. If the House caves, it won’t just be one deputy’s mandate lost; it’ll be a green light for Lula to dismantle Brazil’s democratic checks, one conservative at a time.

Brazil deserves better than this two-faced tyrant. Time for the people—and principled lawmakers—to push back, expose the hypocrisy, and demand accountability for all, starting with Lula himself.

 

Source Hora Brasília

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