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    Home » Lula’s PT Turns Taxpayer Billions into a Digital Attack Machine
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    Lula’s PT Turns Taxpayer Billions into a Digital Attack Machine

    HotspotorlandoNewsBy HotspotorlandoNews2 de June de 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
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    Lula’s PT Turns Taxpayer Billions into a Digital Attack Machine

    By Hotspotnews

    In the halls of power in Brasília, Brazilian taxpayers are unwittingly funding one of the most sophisticated partisan propaganda operations in the nation’s history. Under President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva and his Workers’ Party (PT), what was once sold as “government communication” has morphed into a coordinated digital militia—complete with daily strategy sessions, paid influencers, and relentless attacks on critics, opposition figures, and independent journalists.

    At the center sits the Secretaria de Comunicação Social (Secom), which in 2025 alone poured a record R$130 million into internet ads—the highest figure since records began in 2009, dwarfing previous years and even surpassing entire periods under prior administrations. This isn’t neutral public information about vaccines or infrastructure. It’s a targeted blitz on social media platforms, designed to shape narratives, smear dissenters, and prepare the battlefield for upcoming elections.

    Documents and reports have exposed an organogram linking Minister Paulo Pimenta (during his Secom tenure) to a network involving PT-linked influencers like Thiago dos Reis, Instituto Lula operatives, and state media figures. Daily “pauta” meetings align government messaging with party operatives and agencies such as Polo Digital Marketing. These sessions reportedly coordinate responses to critics, amplification of favorable stories, and counterattacks on the opposition. The PT pays agencies like Polo hundreds of thousands monthly from the Fundo Partidário—public money drawn straight from the federal budget and distributed to parties for “maintenance.” In 2025, the PT alone received over R$140 million from this fund.

    Add to that roughly R$2 million in direct payments (or through agencies) to dozens of influencers and celebrities since 2025 for so-called “institutional campaigns.” Names like actress Dira Paes pulling in hundreds of thousands for promoting government apps. Critics rightly ask: How much of this “institutional” work bleeds into partisan hit jobs against conservatives, business owners, or anyone questioning Lula’s policies on the economy, crime, or corruption?

    This is the same PT that spent years screaming about a supposed “gabinete do ódio” under Jair Bolsonaro—accusations that fueled lawfare, censorship, and investigations. Now in power, they have built something far more institutionalized: a taxpayer-subsidized echo chamber. Opposition lawmakers have pushed for a CPI (Parliamentary Inquiry Commission) into this “milícia digital do PT,” citing misuse of public structures for political warfare. Signatures have mounted, but predictably, the machine grinds on.

    Brazil’s public funding model for parties and government ads was always ripe for abuse. The Fundo Partidário and massive Secom budgets—hundreds of millions overall—allow those in control of the Planalto to weaponize the state’s resources against their enemies. It’s not democracy; it’s incumbency protection, funded by the very citizens they target.

    Conservatives and liberty-minded Brazilians have long warned that handing blank checks to politicians erodes accountability. The PT’s digital operation proves the point: When government and party blur into one, free speech becomes a casualty, and the opposition fights with one hand tied behind its back—its own tax dollars forging the chains.

    The Brazilian people deserve transparency, not a state-sponsored troll army. As pre-election spending ramps up, the question isn’t whether this machine exists. It’s whether voters will finally demand an end to this brazen use of public money to manipulate public opinion. Freedom of expression and fiscal responsibility hang in the balance.

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