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Brazil's Right Tests A Tarcísiomichelle Ticket As Courts Reshape The Field
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Brazil's opposition is rallying around a 2026 ticket pairing São Paulo governor Tarcísio de Freitas with ex-first lady Michelle Bolsonaro, a way to preserve Bolsonarismo while Jair Bolsonaro remains barred from running.
Senator Ciro Nogueira has ruled himself out as vice but says any viable candidacy still depends on Bolsonaro's blessing.
Tarcísio, a pro-market former infrastructure minister, tells business leaders that Brazil must“change the CEO” for the country to work again, signalling a national project built on management and infrastructure.
Michelle, who leads the Liberal Party's women's wing and mobilises evangelical voters, offers continuity with Bolsonaro 's base and a potent campaign presence.
Inside the opposition, her presence is also seen as a deliberate attempt to balance Tarcísio's main vulnerability in São Paulo: he has not yet convinced a large share of women voters, and a popular former first lady is expected to soften that deficit and broaden the ticket's appeal.
As this succession plan advances, the Bolsonaro family faces judicial pressure. Federal deputy Eduardo Bolsonaro has become a defendant at the Supreme Court.
Meanwhile, Senator Flávio Bolsonaro has tried to reinforce a law-and-order image by delivering crowdfunded donations to families of Rio police officers killed in recent operations.
Brazil's courts and politics ahead of 2026
At the same time, the judiciary and Congress are tightening the security agenda and exposing the state's weak spots. Justice Alexandre de Moraes ordered the return of seized devices to a hacker after investigators found no crime, while the case against whistleblower Eduardo Tagliaferro is seen as a warning to insiders.
Lawmakers debate tougher penalties for graffiti, a national register of prisoners and limits on unmarked police convoys, as investigators uncover fraud that used INSS payroll deductions to move about R$ 700 million (around $130 million) through associations such as Conafer, with parallel inquiries touching figures close to President Lula 's family.
On the ideological front, COP30 in Belém has highlighted the gap between radical demands at the parallel People's Summit and the search for workable climate compromises.
In Brasília, the University of Brasília's decision to grant an honorary doctorate to former president Dilma Rousseff divides opinion between those who hail recognition and those who see an attempt to soften memories of a crisis-marked presidency.
Together, these strands show a Brazil where the right tests its next standard-bearers while courts, scandals and climate diplomacy redraw the battlefield for 2026.
Senator Ciro Nogueira has ruled himself out as vice but says any viable candidacy still depends on Bolsonaro's blessing.
Tarcísio, a pro-market former infrastructure minister, tells business leaders that Brazil must“change the CEO” for the country to work again, signalling a national project built on management and infrastructure.
Michelle, who leads the Liberal Party's women's wing and mobilises evangelical voters, offers continuity with Bolsonaro 's base and a potent campaign presence.
Inside the opposition, her presence is also seen as a deliberate attempt to balance Tarcísio's main vulnerability in São Paulo: he has not yet convinced a large share of women voters, and a popular former first lady is expected to soften that deficit and broaden the ticket's appeal.
As this succession plan advances, the Bolsonaro family faces judicial pressure. Federal deputy Eduardo Bolsonaro has become a defendant at the Supreme Court.
Meanwhile, Senator Flávio Bolsonaro has tried to reinforce a law-and-order image by delivering crowdfunded donations to families of Rio police officers killed in recent operations.
Brazil's courts and politics ahead of 2026
At the same time, the judiciary and Congress are tightening the security agenda and exposing the state's weak spots. Justice Alexandre de Moraes ordered the return of seized devices to a hacker after investigators found no crime, while the case against whistleblower Eduardo Tagliaferro is seen as a warning to insiders.
Lawmakers debate tougher penalties for graffiti, a national register of prisoners and limits on unmarked police convoys, as investigators uncover fraud that used INSS payroll deductions to move about R$ 700 million (around $130 million) through associations such as Conafer, with parallel inquiries touching figures close to President Lula 's family.
On the ideological front, COP30 in Belém has highlighted the gap between radical demands at the parallel People's Summit and the search for workable climate compromises.
In Brasília, the University of Brasília's decision to grant an honorary doctorate to former president Dilma Rousseff divides opinion between those who hail recognition and those who see an attempt to soften memories of a crisis-marked presidency.
Together, these strands show a Brazil where the right tests its next standard-bearers while courts, scandals and climate diplomacy redraw the battlefield for 2026.
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