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Brazil's Hidden Hand: Lula's Fight To Tame The Centrão Machine
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) In the humid halls of Brasília, where Brazil's democracy hums with the barter of favors, President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva is pruning his garden of allies-just months before the 2026 elections that could reshape Latin America's largest economy.
This October, amid a cascade of congressional defeats, Lula's administration sacked over 400 officials from the Centrão, a pragmatic cartel of center-right parties: Progressistas, União Brasil, Republicanos, PSD, and MDB.
These groups, masters of Brazil's fragmented politics, trade votes for patronage, a system echoing the vote-buying scandals that once tarnished Lula 's own legacy.
The spark? Lawmakers gutted Provisional Measure 1.303 on October 10, rejecting a plan to raise R$20.6 billion-through taxes on elite betting windfalls and fintech profits-to buoy social programs in an election year.
Centrão deputies, lobbied by gambling magnates and bankers, sided against the Workers' Party chief, exposing the coalition's fragility in a Congress where no faction holds sway.
Lula struck back swiftly: freezing R$7.5 billion in pork-barrel amendments and ousting mid-level bosses from agriculture outposts to transport directorates at the National Department of Infrastructure (DNIT, R$15.3 billion budget) and the state bank Caixa Econômica Federal.
Lula's Power Struggle Exposes Brazil's Deep Patronage Politics
Yet the purge barely dents the bloc's fortress. It still commands R$97.8 billion-nearly matching the Finance Ministry's war chest-and 63 plum posts in ministries, regulators like the National Petroleum Agency, and enterprises doling out regional largesse.
PSD scion Gilberto Kassab, whispering strategies to São Paulo's right-wing governor Tarcísio de Freitas (a 2026 rival), grips Agriculture, Mines and Energy (R$3.8 billion), and Fishing (R$22.8 billion total).
MDB lords over Cities, Planning, and Transports (R$51.8 billion), fueling highways and housing. Senate powerbroker Davi Alcolumbre of União Brasil shields Lula from worse blows. He blocked amnesty for the 2023 rioters.
At the same time, he retains control of the Tourism ministry (R$3.1 billion) and the communications fief (R$12.2 billion). Even the ostensibly departed Progressistas cling to Sports (R$3.1 billion) and drought-relief agencies.
This isn't mere infighting; it's a microcosm of Brazil's patronage polity, where billions cascade to parochial projects, stalling reforms on inequality and climate-issues that ripple to global markets hungry for Brazilian soy, iron, and stability.
With Lula's approval at 50%, his gambit tests whether he can forge loyalty or fuel the right's resurgence. For outsiders, it's a reminder: in the world's 9th-largest economy, true progress demands dismantling these invisible webs, lest democracy devolve into deal-making, and elections into auctions.
This October, amid a cascade of congressional defeats, Lula's administration sacked over 400 officials from the Centrão, a pragmatic cartel of center-right parties: Progressistas, União Brasil, Republicanos, PSD, and MDB.
These groups, masters of Brazil's fragmented politics, trade votes for patronage, a system echoing the vote-buying scandals that once tarnished Lula 's own legacy.
The spark? Lawmakers gutted Provisional Measure 1.303 on October 10, rejecting a plan to raise R$20.6 billion-through taxes on elite betting windfalls and fintech profits-to buoy social programs in an election year.
Centrão deputies, lobbied by gambling magnates and bankers, sided against the Workers' Party chief, exposing the coalition's fragility in a Congress where no faction holds sway.
Lula struck back swiftly: freezing R$7.5 billion in pork-barrel amendments and ousting mid-level bosses from agriculture outposts to transport directorates at the National Department of Infrastructure (DNIT, R$15.3 billion budget) and the state bank Caixa Econômica Federal.
Lula's Power Struggle Exposes Brazil's Deep Patronage Politics
Yet the purge barely dents the bloc's fortress. It still commands R$97.8 billion-nearly matching the Finance Ministry's war chest-and 63 plum posts in ministries, regulators like the National Petroleum Agency, and enterprises doling out regional largesse.
PSD scion Gilberto Kassab, whispering strategies to São Paulo's right-wing governor Tarcísio de Freitas (a 2026 rival), grips Agriculture, Mines and Energy (R$3.8 billion), and Fishing (R$22.8 billion total).
MDB lords over Cities, Planning, and Transports (R$51.8 billion), fueling highways and housing. Senate powerbroker Davi Alcolumbre of União Brasil shields Lula from worse blows. He blocked amnesty for the 2023 rioters.
At the same time, he retains control of the Tourism ministry (R$3.1 billion) and the communications fief (R$12.2 billion). Even the ostensibly departed Progressistas cling to Sports (R$3.1 billion) and drought-relief agencies.
This isn't mere infighting; it's a microcosm of Brazil's patronage polity, where billions cascade to parochial projects, stalling reforms on inequality and climate-issues that ripple to global markets hungry for Brazilian soy, iron, and stability.
With Lula's approval at 50%, his gambit tests whether he can forge loyalty or fuel the right's resurgence. For outsiders, it's a reminder: in the world's 9th-largest economy, true progress demands dismantling these invisible webs, lest democracy devolve into deal-making, and elections into auctions.
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