The Supreme Court’s Lost Legitimacy: Time to Declare the Last Six Years Null and Void

By Hotspotnews

For too long, Brazilians who still believe in the rule of law, family values, individual liberty, and national sovereignty have watched in silent outrage as the Supreme Federal Court (STF) drifted further from its constitutional role and deeper into raw political activism. A recent, blunt assessment by respected legal voices has finally put into plain words what millions already feel in their bones: the entire body of jurisprudence produced by the current composition of the STF over the past six years is tainted, unreliable, and in many cases outright illegitimate.

The claim is stark but grounded in reality—“All STF jurisprudence is vitiated, all processes are null, everyone has been wronged in these last six years.” This is not hyperbole from fringe voices; it echoes the growing consensus among constitutional scholars, former justices of integrity, and everyday citizens who have seen their rights trampled under the guise of “defending democracy.”

Consider what has transpired since roughly 2019. Landmark decisions have repeatedly bent or broken procedural norms to achieve desired political outcomes. Due process has been selectively ignored when inconvenient. Freedom of expression—once a cornerstone of any free society—has been curtailed through sweeping, poorly defined censorship orders. Political opponents have been targeted with unequal treatment under the law, while allies enjoy near-impunity. Investigations have morphed into fishing expeditions, and judgments have been issued with apparent disregard for precedent, evidence, or even basic fairness.

The result is a judiciary that no longer inspires confidence. When the highest court in the land operates as an unelected super-legislature, picking winners and losers based on ideology rather than law, the entire legal order suffers. Citizens lose faith not only in specific rulings but in the very idea that justice can be blind. Businesses hesitate to invest in a country where contracts and property rights can be overturned on a whim. Families watch helplessly as loved ones are imprisoned under dubious pretenses, often for political speech rather than genuine crimes.

Conservatives have long warned that abandoning originalist or textualist interpretations of the Constitution in favor of “living” or “evolving” readings would lead exactly here—to a court that substitutes its own policy preferences for the will of the people as expressed through their elected representatives. The past six years have proven those warnings correct. The damage extends far beyond any single case or political figure; it strikes at the foundation of republican government itself.

Restoring trust will not be easy, but it begins with unflinching honesty. The first step is acknowledging the rot: much of what has come out of the STF in recent years cannot stand. Processes built on biased panels, coerced testimonies, or extralegal pressure must be revisited. Convictions secured through procedural shortcuts deserve re-examination. The court’s own precedents—those manufactured to serve momentary political ends—should carry no binding weight.

True reform requires courage. It means demanding accountability from those who abused their positions. It means returning the judiciary to its proper, limited role: interpreting the law as written, not rewriting it to fit a progressive agenda. Above all, it means reaffirming that sovereignty belongs to the Brazilian people—not to a handful of ministers insulated from electoral accountability.

The Brazilian right has always stood for order, tradition, faith, and freedom under law. Today that stand requires defending the Constitution against those who would hollow it out from within. Declaring the last six years of STF output presumptively vitiated is not an attack on institutions; it is the only way to save them. Anything less is surrender to judicial tyranny dressed up as virtue.

The time for polite silence is over. The rule of law must be reclaimed—before it is lost forever.

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