The Brazilian Judiciary: Even Insiders Admit It’s Broken
By Hotspotnews
In a stunning admission that should shake every Brazilian citizen to their core, Luciano Lewandowski — economist and brother of former Supreme Court Justice and former Minister of Justice Ricardo Lewandowski — has publicly declared that Brazil no longer has law or justice.
His words, shared in a LinkedIn comment amid discussions of the massive Banco Master scandal, cut straight to the heart of what conservatives have warned about for years: a two-tiered system where ordinary citizens wait decades for resolution while the powerful and well-connected receive lightning-fast favors.
Luciano described a judiciary where precedent has been shredded, where judges rule however they please, where legal deadlines mean nothing, and where conflict-of-interest rules have evaporated. In his blunt assessment: ministers can now judge cases involving their own family members without consequence. For everyday Brazilians — the “mortals” in his words — justice drags on endlessly. For the “friends of the king,” decisions arrive in hours.
His conclusion is devastating: real justice in Brazil would require starting from zero. Unfortunately, he believes that reset will not happen in our generation.
Coming from someone so closely tied to the highest levels of the judicial establishment, this is not mere opposition rhetoric. It is an insider’s confession that the system conservatives have long criticized as politicized, activist, and corrupt has reached terminal decay.
The Banco Master case that prompted Luciano’s outburst only underscores the rot. Billions vanished in questionable operations, powerful figures and institutions appear entangled, yet accountability remains elusive for those at the top. Regular depositors and investors suffer while connections seem to shield others from serious scrutiny.
This is the reality of modern Brazil under prolonged left-wing influence in key institutions: rules bend for the elite, ordinary people are crushed under bureaucracy, and faith in the rule of law collapses. When even family members of Supreme Court justices lose hope, the mask has fully slipped.
Conservatives have fought for judicial reform, an end to activist overreach, respect for constitutional limits, and equal treatment under the law. The current system delivers none of those things. It protects its own, punishes dissenters, and leaves average citizens defenseless.
Luciano Lewandowski’s rare candor should serve as a wake-up call. Brazil cannot continue pretending its institutions function impartially. Without bold, structural change — real accountability, depoliticization of courts, and restoration of objective legal standards — the country risks sliding further into lawlessness disguised as legality.
The Brazilian people deserve better than a justice system that openly admits it serves two classes: the rulers and the ruled. It’s time to demand the equal rule of law that true conservatives have always championed — before it’s too late for yet another generation.

