Trump’s Leverage Play: Lula Learns the Hard Way That “We Told You So” Isn’t Just a Meme

By Hotspotnews

In the grand theater of international diplomacy, few things are more satisfying than watching a socialist government realize that reality doesn’t care about their hashtags or globalist backslapping. Enter Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva and his team, fresh from a three-hour sit-down with President Donald Trump, emerging with… well, another working group. How thrilling. The same Minister Márcio Elias Rosa who spent the presser sounding like a man explaining why the dog ate Brazil’s export homework is now the viral star of opposition “I told you so” clips. And honestly? They did.

Let’s recap for the slow learners in Brasília: Trump slapped tariffs on Brazilian goods—steep ones—because Lula’s crew decided chasing Jair Bolsonaro (Trump’s actual friend) through the courts, cozying up to China, and playing environmental scold was smarter than keeping the world’s most powerful economy happy. Coffee, beef, steel, aircraft parts—hit. Brazil’s exporters felt the pain, Brazilian workers felt the pain, and Lula’s popularity felt the pain. Shocking.

Now, after the May 7 meeting that both sides politely called “positive,” the big win for Team Lula is… more meetings. A working group in the next 30 days. How 21st-century. Meanwhile, the remaining tariffs linger like an unwanted guest who knows he holds the lease. And here’s the delicious part: Trump doesn’t need to rush anything. Not on tariffs. Not on rare earths and critical minerals. Not on resetting the relationship.

Why would he? America has options. Brazil’s minerals are nice, sure, but Trump can simply wait. Wait until Brazil’s economy squeaks a little louder. Wait until October 2026 when Brazilian voters get another crack at this circus. Wait until January 27 if he feels like it—because leverage this good doesn’t expire. The United States isn’t desperate for Brazilian soy or iron ore. China’s already overpaying for influence down there anyway; let Lula explain those terms to his own farmers when the American market stays partially closed.

The consequences are writing themselves. Brazilian industry is watching its competitive edge rust under artificial American barriers. Jobs tied to exports are wobbling. Investment dollars that could be flowing south are instead looking for friendlier, more stable partners who don’t treat pro-American leaders like criminals. And all the while, the opposition gets to run clip after clip of Lula’s own minister admitting the obvious: the tariffs didn’t magically vanish because Brazil showed up with a PowerPoint and some vintage Lula charm.

This is what happens when ideology meets economics. Lula bet that Trump 2.0 would fold like some European bureaucrat charmed by climate pledges and multilateral word salad. Instead, he got the same Trump who remembers who his friends are—and who isn’t afraid to use tariffs as a feature, not a bug. No groveling, no desperate concessions from the American side. Just calm, calculated patience.

So enjoy the working groups, gentlemen. Enjoy the photo-ops and the optimistic quotes. The adults in the room already know how this ends: Brazil will eventually come around, because markets don’t do participation trophies. Trump can afford to sip Diet Coke in the Oval Office and let time do what endless negotiations never quite manage—apply pressure where it actually hurts.

We told them so. Some people just had to learn it the expensive way.

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