URGENT: Lula Declares Open War on Fiscal Sanity and Moderation – PT’s 2026 Resolution Betrays 2022 Promises and Risks Brazil’s Future
By Hotspotorlando News Editorial Team – February 8, 2026
In an explosive and unapologetic display at the Workers’ Party (PT)’s 46th anniversary celebration in Salvador Bahia, President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva and his party have ripped off the mask of moderation they wore to win the 2022 election. What was sold to Brazilians as a return to “peace and love” governance has been replaced by a militant call to arms: massive state spending explosions, direct assaults on the Central Bank’s hard-earned independence, demands to slash interest rates regardless of inflation risks, and unqualified solidarity with authoritarian regimes in Venezuela and Cuba.
The PT’s National Directorate formally approved this radical political resolution on February 6, 2026, during the first major gathering of the year. The document frames the Central Bank’s autonomy—established under previous leadership to shield monetary policy from political whims—as nothing less than an “obstacle” and “blockade” to the “elected project.” It calls for aggressive reduction of the Selic rate (currently at restrictive levels to combat inflation), a revision of the 3% inflation target to prioritize growth and jobs over price stability, and unchecked public expenditure as the primary engine of the economy. Fiscal rules and the spending framework? Mere hurdles to be sidestepped or weakened.
This isn’t subtle policy nuance—it’s a blueprint for returning to the interventionist populism that defined earlier PT governments and led to devastating recessions, currency devaluation, and lost investor confidence. By treating fiscal discipline as optional and the Central Bank as an adversary rather than an independent guardian of economic stability, Lula’s team is gambling with the livelihoods of millions. Conservative voices have long argued that such policies inevitably fuel inflation spirals, erode purchasing power (especially for the poor), and saddle future generations with unpayable debt. History is not on the side of those who ignore these warnings.
Lula himself sealed the shift with a blistering speech on February 7, declaring the end of “Lulinha paz e amor.” He framed the 2026 campaign as outright “political war,” urging PT militants to become more aggressive (“desaforados”), to “send” opponents and liars “to that place,” to fight misinformation head-on rather than delete or ignore it, and to prepare for battle. The conciliatory tone that helped him win over centrists and moderates in 2022—promising institutional respect, market dialogue, and broad coalitions—has been explicitly discarded. In its place: confrontation, ideological purity, and mobilization of the base at any cost.
The resolution doubles down on classic left-wing flags: ending the 6×1 work schedule without wage cuts, pushing zero-fare public transport nationwide, regulating big tech, taxing banks and billionaires more heavily, and defending Venezuela and Cuba against any “foreign interference” (code for rejecting democratic accountability or sanctions on dictatorships). While these may energize core supporters, they alienate the very swing voters who delivered Lula’s narrow 2022 victory and risk isolating Brazil internationally at a time when strong Western alliances are essential for trade, investment, and security.
This pivot is a betrayal of the trust placed in Lula by millions who believed he had evolved beyond the failed experiments of the past. It exposes the PT’s true colors: a party more committed to ideological crusades and power consolidation than to pragmatic governance that delivers broad prosperity. As 2026 approaches, the opposition—conservatives, liberals, and centrists alike—must unite to highlight this dangerous turn. Brazilians deserve leaders who protect economic stability, uphold institutional independence, and prioritize national interests over socialist nostalgia or foreign dictators.
The warning signs are flashing red. Lula’s “war” rhetoric and the PT’s retrograde agenda threaten to undo hard-won gains in inflation control, fiscal credibility, and market confidence. Brazil cannot afford another lost decade. Conservatives and moderates: sound the alarm, organize, and offer the responsible alternative the country desperately needs. The fight for a free, prosperous Brazil starts now.

