U.S. Congressman Warns: 'America Stands With The Brazilian People, Justice Is Coming
(MENAFN- The Rio Times)
U.S. conservatives esalate from sanctions and tariffs to post-verdict threats as Brasília dismisses warnings
(Op-Ed Analysis)“America stands with the Brazilian people, justice is coming .” With these words, Congressman Rich McCormick reacted to Jair Bolsonaro's conviction. They were not empty lines on social media. They were the latest in a storm of warnings from Washington's conservative establishment - a storm that Brazil's leaders seem unwilling to recognize.
By mid-2025, months before the Supreme Court reached its verdict, the Trump administration had already begun punishing Brasília . In July, Washington imposed a sweeping 50% tariff on most Brazilian exports to the United States, revoked visas for Justice Alexandre de Moraes, other justices, and their families, and placed Moraes under Global Magnitsky sanctions for alleged human-rights abuses including arbitrary arrests and censorship orders. These are punishments normally reserved for authoritarian regimes - now applied to the judiciary of a democratic ally.
The same month, the White House press secretary delivered a startling message:“America will defend freedom of speech with every tool available - diplomatic, economic, and, if necessary, military.” No Brazilian government in modern history had faced such language from Washington.
These steps reflected the conviction among U.S. conservatives that Brazil's judiciary was waging“lawfare” against Bolsonaro. McCormick accused Moraes of weaponizing justice to rig elections, while Senator Marco Rubio warned the United States could not stand by as Brazil slid toward totalitarianism.
After the Conviction: Escalation
When the Supreme Court in September sentenced Bolsonaro to 27 years, the U.S. reaction sharpened. McCormick denounced the justices as“criminal thugs” and vowed that all who enabled Moraes' rulings would be“severely punished.” Rubio declared the trial a“witch hunt” and promised that America would“respond accordingly.”
Donald Trump himself spoke out, describing Bolsonaro as“a good man” and the verdict as“a terrible thing for Brazil,” adding that it looked“very much like what they tried to do with me.” His words tied Bolsonaro's fate directly to his own battles, cementing the sense that both leaders are targets of the same political playbook.
On Capitol Hill, Republicans convened hearings on what they called a “crisis of democracy and freedom” in Brazil. Congressman Chris Smith accused Lula's government and the courts of abusing legal procedures to eliminate opposition. McCormick repeated that Bolsonaro's trial was“not about justice but about destroying competition.”
Beyond politics, influential figures weighed in. Elon Musk, already clashing with Moraes over censorship orders, labeled him“an outright criminal” and warned that Brazil was erasing free expression. Online, conservative influencers amplified the message that Brazil's courts had crossed the line from defending democracy to undermining it.
Coordination With Bolsonaro's Camp
This American chorus did not rise in isolation. Bolsonaro's son, Congressman Eduardo Bolsonaro, has spent months lobbying Republicans in Washington, posting photos with U.S. lawmakers and urging sanctions on Brazil's judges. At rallies back home, protesters waved American flags and appealed directly to Trump and Rubio, underscoring the sense of a transnational conservative alliance.
Markets are watching closely. U.S. analysts warned that Bolsonaro's conviction“supercharges political risk” in Brazil. With tariffs already biting and the prospect of deeper sanctions ahead, investors are recalculating Brazil's risk profile. Higher borrowing costs, potential capital flight, and fragile confidence are now part of the equation.
Yet Brasília has so far dismissed the storm. President Lula insists the courts acted independently, while his foreign ministry calls U.S. criticism an“attack on sovereignty.” But sovereignty does not shield economies from tariffs, sanctions, or investor unease. In global markets, power speaks through trade measures and shifting capital flows.
Why This Matters
For Bolsonaro's opponents, the conviction was accountability. For Washington's conservatives, it was persecution. Their warning is clear: if questioning an election is criminalized, democracy itself is endangered.
The clash is no longer about one man. It is about how Brazil is perceived abroad, whether it retains credibility with investors, and whether it can claim to defend democracy while jailing its most prominent opposition leader. America has already shown that the measures imposed before the conviction were only a beginning. What follows may be far harsher.
Conclusion
Readers should not underestimate what is brewing. Washington's conservatives have put Brazil on notice: sanctions, tariffs, diplomatic isolation, and even the language of military defense are now part of the conversation. For Brazil, the challenge is stark. Justice must be done - but it must also be seen as impartial. A verdict perceived as partisan at home and condemned abroad risks undermining the very democracy it claims to protect.
“America stands with the Brazilian people,” McCormick promised. Whether that becomes solidarity with Brazil's democracy or pressure on its sovereignty depends on how Brasília navigates the months ahead. The world is watching.
Timeline: U.S. Response to Brazil
Key actions and statements surrounding Jair Bolsonaro's case, shown clearly before and after the conviction.
Before the Conviction (July–August 2025)-
July: Trump administration imposes 50% tariffs on most Brazilian exports to the United States.
July: U.S. revokes visas for Justice Alexandre de Moraes, other Supreme Court justices, and their families.
July: Treasury applies Global Magnitsky sanctions to Alexandre de Moraes for alleged human-rights abuses and censorship.
July: White House press secretary states the U.S. will defend freedom of speech with diplomatic, economic, and, if necessary, military tools.
-
Sept 11: Brazil's Supreme Court sentences Jair Bolsonaro to 27 years.
Sept 12: Rep. Rich McCormick calls STF justices“criminal thugs” and vows they will be“severely punished.”
Sept 12: Secretary of State Marco Rubio calls the case a“witch hunt” and says the U.S. will respond accordingly.
Sept 13: Donald Trump says Bolsonaro is a“good man,” calling the verdict a terrible thing for Brazil and comparing it to his own cases.
Sept: U.S. House Republicans hold hearings labeling the situation a crisis of democracy and freedom in Brazil.
Sept: Elon Musk calls Alexandre de Moraes an outright criminal and warns of censorship and suppression of free expression.
Ongoing: Eduardo Bolsonaro lobbies U.S. Republicans in Washington, urging further sanctions and support.

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