Lula’s Leftist Allies Embarrass Themselves in Washington: A Desperate Attempt to Drag America into Brazil’s Political Vendetta
By Hotspotnews
In a move that reeks of political desperation and international meddling, allies of Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva dispatched a ragtag delegation of leftist lawmakers to Washington this week. Their mission? Not to strengthen bilateral ties, boost trade, or combat real threats like organized crime—but to beg Democratic members of Congress to launch an investigation into the Bolsonaro family. Specifically, they targeted alleged financial ties involving ex-banker Daniel Vorcaro and activities linked to Senator Flávio Bolsonaro and former Deputy Eduardo Bolsonaro.
This wasn’t diplomacy. It was a blatant attempt at lawfare on foreign soil, the kind of tactic the global left has perfected: weaponizing institutions, foreign governments, and selective “investigations” to silence conservative voices and crush political opposition. The delegation—including figures like André Janones, Jandira Feghali, Pedro Uczai, and Pedro Campos—arrived with a stack of public reports and whispers, hoping to paint the Bolsonaros as part of some shadowy network operating in the United States. They even admitted the left had underestimated the Bolsonaro family’s longstanding rapport with President Donald Trump and Republican circles, calling their own belated scramble “necessary but late.”
It is a shame! They had no business coming here.
The audacity is staggering. These Brazilian leftist lawmakers had zero legitimate business jetting off to Washington—on the taxpayer dime or whoever’s footing their bill—to drag America’s Congress into their domestic political witch hunt. Brazil faces skyrocketing crime, economic struggles, and growing Chinese influence in its backyard, yet Lula’s allies prioritize harassing political opponents abroad. They weren’t here to discuss trade, security, or hemispheric stability—they came shopping for sympathetic Democrats willing to open yet another “investigation” file on Flávio and Eduardo Bolsonaro.
The results? Predictably humiliating. As one viral video circulating among Brazilian conservatives captured, the group was reportedly stonewalled by anyone who matters in the current American power structure. No warm welcome from the Trump administration. No high-level meetings with Republican leaders who actually shape policy. Just a cold shoulder from the opposition benches they courted, underscoring how out of touch Lula’s crew remains with the reality of American politics today.
This episode exposes the rot at the heart of the Brazilian left’s strategy. For years, they’ve pursued former President Jair Bolsonaro and his family through endless probes, raids, and media smears—often over issues that pale in comparison to the corruption scandals that have long plagued Lula’s own orbit. Now, with Bolsonaro’s son Flávio positioning as a strong presidential contender, the regime is panicking. Unable to win on ideas or results, they turn to foreign capitals for ammunition. It’s not governance; it’s grievance politics exported abroad.
Conservatives worldwide recognize this playbook. It’s the same one used against Trump himself—endless investigations, lawfare, and attempts to entangle allies in domestic feuds. But America under Trump isn’t buying it. The United States has no business inserting itself into Brazil’s internal elections or family disputes, especially when the real priorities are securing borders, fair trade, and countering actual threats like Chinese influence in Latin America. The Bolsonaro family’s engagement with the White House represents a natural alignment of conservative values: strong families, national sovereignty, economic freedom, and resistance to socialist overreach.
What the left calls “investigation” is really interference. The Bolsonaros have built real relationships through transparency and shared principles, not backroom deals. Meanwhile, Lula’s envoys return home empty-handed, their stunt exposed as the ridiculous spectacle it was. Brazilians watching this farce see the contrast clearly: one side fights for the people, the other for power at any cost.
This failed Washington junket won’t derail the conservative resurgence in Brazil. If anything, it galvanizes supporters who are tired of endless persecution and eager for leaders who put families, faith, and freedom first. The left’s latest blunder is just more proof that their time is passing—and that true patriots, at home and abroad, stand ready to defend what’s right. The Bolsonaro family endures because their message resonates: Brazil first, always.
Keep your political vendettas at home. America isn’t your playground for targeting conservatives you can’t beat at the ballot box. The shame is all theirs.

