The Shadow of the Robe Dictatorship: How the Moraes-Alcolumbre Alliance Engineered Lula’s Historic Humiliation Over Jorge Messias

By Hotspotnews 

From a conservative, patriotic perspective — no sugarcoating.

On April 29, 2026, the Brazilian Senate delivered a stinging historic rebuke: rejecting President Lula’s nominee to the Supreme Federal Court (STF) for the first time since 1894. Jorge Messias, Lula’s Attorney General, lost 42-34. On the surface, it looked like legislative independence. In reality, it was a calculated power struggle and personal payback orchestrated by the unbreakable alliance between STF Minister Alexandre de Moraes and Senate President Davi Alcolumbre.

This wasn’t about ideology or principle. It was about raw power and bruised egos. Lula failed to consult Alcolumbre before naming Messias — despite Alcolumbre’s clear, repeated preference for his ally Senator Rodrigo Pacheco. Alcolumbre saw it as a direct insult to his authority over the Senate’s confirmation process. His response? Total war in the shadows.

As detailed  in O Globo, Moraes deployed emissaries to lean on senators with business before the STF, while Alcolumbre personally whipped votes across the Centrão and “independents.” He even whispered the exact margin of defeat to government leader Jaques Wagner moments before the vote: “He’s going to lose by eight.” The operation united unlikely bedfellows — bolsonaristas led by Flávio Bolsonaro, Centrão operators, and the Moraes-Alcolumbre axis — all to deliver a public humiliation to Lula.

Alcolumbre, firmly Moraes’ man in the Senate, used the moment strategically. By torpedoing Messias, he:

  • Avenged the perceived disrespect from the Planalto,
  • Gave the opposition a controlled “migalha” (crumb) of victory to improve his image ahead of future Senate leadership battles,
  • Kept the STF internal balance tilted in Moraes’ favor by blocking a potential ally for the more conservative Minister André Mendonça,
  • Positioned himself as the indispensable power broker for 2027.

Messias himself was never going to be a real conservative force or reliable partner for Mendonça. His record at the AGU showed a loyal operator for Lula’s agenda: pushing “disinformation” regulations that smelled like censorship, controversial positions on issues like late-term abortion, and consistent defense of statist PT priorities. He would have been another reliable establishment vote — not a game-changer.

This episode lays bare the truth of Brasília: the game isn’t left versus right. It’s a closed power cartel protecting its turf. The Moraes-Alcolumbre pact remains rock solid — one man controlling the Judiciary from the inside, the other guarding the Senate’s agenda and the impeachment “drawer.” Lula got his public humiliation because he dared to ignore the gatekeeper.

The wheel is turning, but slowly and always in service of the same insiders. Conservatives, evangelicals, and patriots can celebrate the Senate’s rare “no,” yet the real fight remains: breaking this above-the-Constitution alliance that treats institutions as personal fiefdoms.

The Senate took its shot. The deeper battle for Brazil’s sovereignty is just beginning.

Brazil above all.

Brasil acima de tudo.

 

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