The Shielding of Lulinha: How Brazil’s Elite Buries Justice for Retirees to Protect the President’s Son
By Hotspotnews
In a nation already weary of scandal and impunity, the spectacle unfolding around the **CPMI do INSS** stands as a fresh disgrace. This parliamentary commission was tasked with investigating one of the most contemptible crimes in recent memory: massive frauds involving irregular consignado loans and unauthorized discounts that have robbed vulnerable Brazilian retirees, pensioners, widows, and orphans of their hard-earned benefits. Billions of reais allegedly siphoned from those who can least afford it. Yet, as the commission approached uncomfortable truths, powerful forces moved swiftly to shut it down.
At the heart of the controversy lies **Fábio Luís Lula da Silva**, known as **Lulinha**, the eldest son of President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. Police investigations and messages intercepted from **Antônio Carlos Camilo Antunes** — the notorious “Careca do INSS,” a central figure in the alleged scheme — pointed to suspicious financial flows. References to monthly payments of around R$ 300,000 directed toward “the son of the guy,” ties to an associate who received over R$ 1.5 million, and Lulinha’s own reported bank movements totaling R$ 19.5 million across 1,531 transactions between 2022 and early 2026 raised legitimate questions that demanded thorough scrutiny. His defense has maintained that all funds are legitimate, citing inheritance and family transfers, while admitting certain connections, such as a trip funded by the very same Careca.
Conservatives have long warned that family connections to power in Brazil too often translate into protection rather than accountability. Here, the pattern fits perfectly. As the CPMI pursued deeper inquiries, including approved breaks of bank and tax secrecy targeting Lulinha, resistance mounted from the government base and Senate leadership. The goal, critics rightly charge, was not institutional propriety but political damage control: preventing any spillover that could tarnish the president’s image ahead of future electoral battles. In an election year, revelations linking the first family to schemes preying on the elderly would be politically toxic. Better to bury the probe than risk the truth.
Enter **Davi Alcolumbre**, president of the Senate, whose repeated refusal to process the extension request epitomizes the cynicism of Brazil’s political class. Despite Minister André Mendonça’s liminar recognizing “deliberate omission” and ordering action, Alcolumbre and his allies dug in, framing the judicial nudge as an attack on legislative autonomy. Today’s STF plenary session, widely expected to overturn Mendonça’s decision, will likely deliver the final blow, forcing the commission to wrap up by its original March 28 deadline. Pending requests, new witness summons, and further financial analysis will die on the vine. A final report may still emerge, but without additional time, it risks being rushed and incomplete — exactly as the powerful prefer.
This is not mere procedural wrangling. It is a moral failure. Retirees who built this country through decades of labor now watch as the institutions meant to protect them become instruments of elite self-preservation. Allowing the investigation to expire prematurely shields not only Lulinha but a broader network of influence that has allegedly profited while the most defenseless suffer. Alcolumbre, once again, gets away with what many see as political “murder” — strangling oversight to favor the ruling circle. His track record of centrão maneuvering has long drawn accusations of prioritizing power over principle; this episode only adds to the dishonor.
True conservatism demands rule of law applied equally, without favoritism for the connected or the well-born. When the son of the president becomes a focal point in a fraud harming millions of elderly citizens, the response should be transparency and rigorous investigation — not procedural obstruction and judicial theater designed to run out the clock. The Brazilian people, especially those living on fixed INSS incomes, deserve better than this orchestrated fade to black.
The shame belongs to those who prioritize family reputation and political survival over justice for the vulnerable. If the CPMI ends abruptly, the message is clear: in today’s Brazil, some families remain above scrutiny, even when the victims are the nation’s grandparents. This is not governance; it is the quiet consolidation of impunity. And it dishonors every honest Brazilian who still believes in accountability.

