The True Colors of Valdemar Costa Neto: From Mensalão Convict to Bolsonaro’s Unreliable Gatekeeper
By Hotspotnews
In the rough-and-tumble world of Brazilian politics, few figures embody the swampy permanence of the old system quite like Valdemar Costa Neto. As president of the Liberal Party (PL), the man who once welcomed Jair Bolsonaro into his fold now stands accused by true conservatives of playing a far more sinister game: taming the right-wing surge that Bolsonaro ignited, diluting its fire, and positioning himself as the ultimate kingmaker for 2026. His past reeks of the very corruption and deal-making that patriots have fought to uproot. His public spats with the Bolsonaro family reveal a man more interested in control than conviction. And his frantic maneuvering to dictate the vice-presidential slot on a potential Flávio Bolsonaro ticket—while cozying up to longtime Bolsonaro critics like João Doria—exposes the real Valdemar: an establishment operator determined to keep the conservative movement on a short leash.
Let’s start with the man’s baggage, because history doesn’t lie. Valdemar didn’t emerge from the clean air of principled conservatism. He was neck-deep in the infamous Mensalão scandal—the massive vote-buying scheme that stained Lula’s first term. As PL president back then, he was convicted of passive corruption and money laundering by the Supreme Federal Court. He served time in prison alongside PT heavyweights like José Dirceu, the very architects of the leftist machine many on the right despise. Valdemar resigned his congressional seat, collected a fat pension, and later received early release. To his defenders, it’s “old news.” To anyone paying attention, it’s proof he is a creature of the Centrão—the transactional bloc that trades votes for power, ideology be damned. This is not a reformed outsider; this is a survivor who knows exactly how the game is played in Brasília’s backrooms.
That same pragmatic rot has fueled endless friction with Jair Bolsonaro himself. Valdemar has never hidden his frustrations. He’s publicly slammed the disorganization in Bolsonaro’s 2022 campaign headquarters, griped about family rifts involving Flávio, Eduardo, Carlos, and Michelle, and even suggested the clan must “resolve all its problems” before 2026 or risk electoral disaster. After the January 8 events, Valdemar was quick to distance the PL from any whiff of unrest, threatening expulsions and condemning violence—moves that hardline Bolsonaristas saw as throwing the base under the bus. In police testimony tied to election inquiries, he admitted filing challenges to the 2022 results only because Bolsonaro was “too down,” yet later regretted the multimillion-real fines it brought the party. He’s slipped into “sincericídio” moments, comparing Bolsonaro to Che Guevara and agreeing that the former president’s COVID-19 stance hurt his re-election chances. These aren’t minor quibbles; they’re calculated jabs from a party boss who views the Bolsonaro family as useful but unruly assets that need managing.
Nowhere is Valdemar’s lust for control more obvious than in his obsessive grip on the vice-presidential slot for 2026. With Flávio Bolsonaro emerging as the PL’s standard-bearer (a ticket Valdemar himself is aggressively promoting as the path to a Lula runoff), the party leader has repeatedly and publicly shot down Michelle Bolsonaro as a running mate—rejecting her name over a dozen times in recent interviews and events. Instead, he’s relentlessly pushing Senator Tereza Cristina (PP-MS) as the “ideal” vice: a woman from the agribusiness world who would supposedly broaden the ticket’s appeal and win female voters. Romeu Zema, the Novo governor of Minas Gerais, gets praise as an “excellent” alternative too. Valdemar insists the final call rests with Flávio and Jair, but his constant public commentary, his demands for a female running mate to “attract the women’s vote,” and his foot-dragging on any firm decision scream one thing: he wants his thumb on the scale. Why the frenzy? Because a pure conservative ticket anchored by Michelle or another unwavering Bolsonarista risks empowering the grassroots surge Valdemar has spent years trying to channel. A moderate like Tereza or Zema offers safer Centrão alliances, wider coalitions, and—crucially—keeps the PL’s infrastructure firmly under his pragmatic, deal-making control rather than the family’s ideological fire.
The mask slipped even further in late March 2026 during a high-profile Lide event in São Paulo hosted by none other than João Doria—the very establishment figure who spent years clashing with Bolsonaro. There, Doria openly declared that Bolsonaro “errou” on the pandemic, claiming a stronger pro-vaccine stance would have secured re-election. Valdemar, standing right beside him, didn’t push back. He quietly muttered “É verdade”—it’s true—before the microphones caught it. In the same breath, he lectured the Bolsonaro family about resolving its “problems.” For conservatives who remember Doria’s lockdowns and his own presidential ambitions as a direct threat to Bolsonaro’s base, this was no innocent aside. It was a public alignment with one of the right’s sharpest critics, all while Valdemar positions himself as the adult in the room steering the opposition.
This is Valdemar’s playbook in full color: absorb the conservative wave, grow the party on Bolsonaro’s coattails, then slowly neuter its edge through centrist VP picks, family interventions, and quiet nods to the old guard. He delivers organizational muscle and congressional seats, yes—but at the price of ideological purity. True patriots aren’t fooled. The right doesn’t need another Centrão survivor whispering compromises in the ear of the next generation. It needs leaders who fight without apology. Until Valdemar’s influence is checked, the movement he claims to serve will remain one step removed from the full-throated conservative breakthrough Brazil desperately needs. The 2026 battlefield is already being drawn—and Valdemar Costa Neto is determined to make sure the right plays by his rules, not the people’s.


