Senate Strikes Back: Lula’s Judicial Power Grab Halted as Next STF Seat Goes to the 2026 Election Winner
By Hotspotnews
In a historic victory for constitutional integrity and the Brazilian people, the Senate has slammed the brakes on President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s latest attempt to pack the Supreme Federal Court with ideological allies. On April 29, 2026, senators overwhelmingly rejected Lula’s nominee, Solicitor General Jorge Messias, by a decisive 42-34 vote—the first time in more than 130 years that a president’s Supreme Court pick has been turned down by Congress. Senate President Davi Alcolumbre went further, promising opposition lawmakers that he will not schedule any additional Lula nominees this close to the October 2026 presidential election. The next STF minister will be chosen by whoever wins at the ballot box.
This is not just a procedural win; it is a principled stand against the left’s long-running strategy of weaponizing the judiciary. For years, conservatives have watched the STF drift into overt political activism—issuing rulings that often seem designed to shield allies of the establishment left while targeting right-leaning voices. Lula’s push to install Messias, a trusted insider, was widely viewed as an eleventh-hour court-packing maneuver to lock in influence before voters have their say. Alcolumbre’s refusal to play along restores a basic democratic norm: the people, not a lame-duck president desperate for legacy appointments, should decide who shapes the nation’s highest court for the next decades.
The stakes could not be higher. With several justices nearing mandatory retirement in the coming years, the winner of the 2026 election could name as many as four new ministers to the STF. That is an extraordinary opportunity to restore balance to an institution many Brazilians see as dangerously out of step with traditional values, free speech, and constitutional limits. A conservative president elected in October would finally have the mandate to counter years of judicial overreach and return the court to its proper role as impartial guardian of the law rather than an unelected super-legislature.
This moment proves that resistance works. The opposition’s united front in the Senate has forced the PT machine to confront the reality that raw power grabs no longer go unchallenged. It sends a clear message to Lula and his allies: the era of treating the STF as personal property is over. The Brazilian people will decide the court’s future at the polls.
As for impeachment—whether of Lula or the most activist figures on the STF—don’t hold your breath for immediate results. While calls for accountability are loud and justified, removing a sitting president requires a two-thirds supermajority in both houses of Congress, a high bar that simply isn’t realistic in the current political lineup. The same is true for individual justices; the votes aren’t there today. That is why today’s Senate action is so important. It shifts the battlefield to where conservatives have the clearest path to victory: the 2026 presidential election itself.
A strong conservative win in October would deliver far more lasting reform than any short-term impeachment fight ever could. It would hand the next president the power to reshape the STF legitimately, through the will of the voters, and begin the long-overdue work of reining in judicial activism once and for all. Brazil’s Senate has drawn the line. Now it is up to every patriotic voter to cross it in 2026 and deliver the real change the country desperately needs.


