Lula’s Brazen Interference in the Federal Police Exposes Years of Leftist Hypocrisy

By Hotspotnews

For years, the Brazilian mainstream media and the political left turned “interference in the Federal Police” into their favorite battle cry. Every personnel decision, every complaint about leaks, and every attempt by former President Jair Bolsonaro to restore balance inside law enforcement institutions was portrayed as an existential threat to democracy itself. Cable news panels filled with indignant analysts, op-eds screamed about the end of the Republic, and international headlines painted Brazil as sliding into authoritarianism.

Now the mask has slipped.

According to a report in O Estado de S. Paulo, President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva personally intervened with the director-general of the Federal Police to order the return (“devolução”) of experienced federal delegates who had been assigned to assist magistrates. These officers were not playing politics—they were supporting judges in complex investigations. Inside the PF itself, career professionals are viewing this move as outright political interference by the President of the Republic.

The timing and targets are telling. The decision is expected to reach the desk of Minister André Mendonça and could directly impact sensitive cases involving the INSS (National Social Security Institute) and the so-called “Master” investigation. In other words, while ordinary Brazilians struggle with inflation, crime, and a stagnant economy, the government appears more interested in pulling experienced investigators away from the front lines of anti-corruption and fraud work.

This is not subtle reform. This is a power play.

Contrast this with the hysterical coverage during the Bolsonaro years. When the former president dared to question the direction of certain probes or sought new leadership at the top of the PF, the same outlets that are now relatively quiet treated it as a coup in progress. “Bolsonaro is destroying institutions!” they cried. Yet when Lula reaches directly into operational personnel decisions to affect ongoing cases, we are told it is merely “administrative adjustment” or “routine management.”

The double standard is glaring and corrosive to public trust.

The Federal Police, like any serious law enforcement body, must maintain operational independence to pursue justice without fear or favor. When presidents—left or right—treat elite police units as personal tools to protect allies or slow uncomfortable inquiries, the rule of law suffers. Brazilian conservatives have long warned that the real threat to institutions comes not from demands for accountability, but from the selective application of “institutional defense” only when it suits the left.

The PT’s history of scandals—Mensalão, Petrolão, and endless attempts to shield allies—should make any reasonable observer skeptical. Pulling delegates who help judges investigate fraud in social security programs and major corruption cases smells exactly like the kind of protection racket that Lava Jato once fought so hard to expose.

Brazilians deserve better than this revolving-door hypocrisy. If interference in the PF was dangerous under Bolsonaro, it remains dangerous under Lula. The difference is that one side spent years pretending the institutions were sacred while the other is now openly treating them as disposable.

The public is watching. And memory, unlike selective media outrage, does not expire.

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