Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Brazil's Endless Fake News Inquiry Gave Brazil's Top Judge Lasting Power


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points

  • A 2019 inquiry into attacks and fake news against Brazil's Supreme Court has become a long-running tool.
  • Justice Alexandre de Moraes now oversees cases from pro-Bolsonaro influencers to 8 January rioters and global tech platforms.
  • Supporters credit the inquiry with defending democracy; critics say it normalises speech controls and weakens basic checks and balances.

When Brazil's Supreme Court opened its fake news inquiry in March 2019, it described the move as a response to online intimidation, lies and threats aimed at its own members.

Using an internal rule, then-Court president Dias Toffoli bypassed prosecutors, launched the probe himself and hand-picked Justice Alexandre de Moraes as rapporteur – turning the Court into victim, investigator and judge at once.

What began as a narrow case soon became an umbrella. Under its cover, federal police raided pro-Bolsonaro bloggers, lawmakers and business figures suspected of funding“digital militias”, and financial secrecy was lifted for several of them.



The same docket later absorbed investigations into alleged coup-plotting networks and, after the 8 January 2023 storming of Brasília's institutions, hundreds of defendants accused of trying to overturn the election.

With that, Moraes emerged as the key referee of Brazil's crisis. He ordered social-media accounts blocked, posts removed and platforms threatened with steep fines if they refused.

His clash with Elon Musk 's X turned the country into a test case for how far judges can go in forcing moderation of online speech.

Inside the Court, even some who backed the inquiry's legality now argue it should end. Former chief justice Luís Roberto Barroso warns that an open-ended investigation risks poisoning relations with Congress and feeding a story of“judicial dictatorship”.

Yet Moraes and his allies say the climate is too volatile to give up what they view as the only shield against extremism. For critics worried about overmighty judges, the case confirms that exceptional tools rarely disappear once created.

For those more focused on the threat from radical networks, it remains a blunt but necessary defence of elections and institutions. How and when this inquiry closes will say as much about the country's future as about its recent past.

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The Rio Times

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