STF in Disarray: Fux’s Own Office Exposes Botched Effort to Shield Lula from Religious Intolerance Charges
By Hotspotnews
In a stunning admission that has conservatives across Brazil raising eyebrows, Supreme Court Justice Luiz Fux is now quietly investigating his own staff for a procedural blunder that fast-tracked the dismissal of serious allegations against President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.
The case? A formal “notícia-crime” accusing Lula of religious intolerance tied to the 2026 Rio Carnival parade by the Acadêmicos de Niterói samba school — a lavish, taxpayer-subsidized spectacle that many faithful Brazilians viewed as a direct affront to Christian values.
The controversy erupted when the school rolled out its enredo titled “Do alto do Mulungu surge a esperança: Lula, o operário do Brasil.” The parade glorified Lula’s life story, from his humble beginnings to his return to the Planalto Palace, complete with PT party symbols and pointed satires aimed at his political opponents. Critics, including a private attorney who filed the criminal complaint, argued that elements of the performance crossed into outright mockery of religious faith — a clear case of intolerance in a nation where the vast majority still hold Christian beliefs dear.
Instead of allowing the complaint to follow normal channels, Fux stepped in and archived the notícia-crime outright. His stated rationale was a strict reading of the STF’s internal rules: communications alleging crimes against high officials like the president should not be entertained directly by the Court but forwarded to the Procuradoria-Geral da República (PGR). Rather than simply sending the file along for the prosecutor-general’s review, Fux chose to extinguish the matter on his own, without any deeper examination of the merits and without giving the PGR a chance to weigh in.
Now, just days later, Fux is second-guessing that very decision — but not because he suddenly cares about religious freedom. According to reports, he has demanded answers from his own cabinet about whether an “internal error” prevented the mandatory referral to PGR chief Paulo Gonet before the archiving took effect. In plain terms, standard practice in these cases requires the prosecutor-general’s opinion first. That step was apparently skipped, raising the embarrassing possibility that the entire dismissal was rushed and technically flawed.
For conservatives who have long warned about the politicization of Brazil’s highest court, this episode is not surprising — it’s symptomatic. The same institution that has stretched the Constitution to protect certain political figures now finds itself scrambling to fix a paperwork mistake that conveniently buried accusations against the president. The timing is especially galling: just weeks after a Carnival display that many saw as state-sponsored mockery of faith, the STF appears more concerned with internal housekeeping than with defending the religious liberties of ordinary citizens.
What are the consequences? If Fux’s inquiry confirms the procedural shortcut, the case could be reopened and finally sent to the PGR for a proper opinion — though skeptics note that Gonet’s office has shown little appetite for pursuing cases that might embarrass the current administration. Even if it stays buried, the damage is done: another public revelation of sloppy, selective justice at the STF that fuels widespread distrust in Brazil’s institutions. It underscores how the powerful in Brasília enjoy procedural safety nets unavailable to everyday Brazilians who watch their faith publicly ridiculed with public money.
More broadly, this saga highlights the urgent need for genuine reform of the Supreme Court. When even a sitting minister must question his own team over a case involving the president, it exposes a system where loyalty to political allies too often trumps the rule of law and the protection of fundamental freedoms — especially the right of Brazilians to practice their religion without government-backed mockery.
The Brazilian people deserve better than rushed dismissals and whispered internal corrections. They deserve a judiciary that treats religious intolerance as seriously as any other crime — regardless of who sits in the Planalto Palace. Until that changes, episodes like Fux’s latest embarrassment will only deepen the conviction that justice in Brazil remains dangerously two-tiered.

