Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva Biography Flash a weekly Biography.
I am Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, and in the past few days my biography has added a new, very loud chapter about democracy, power, and my old rival Jair Bolsonaro. According to the Associated Press and ABC News, I took the politically explosive step of vetoing a bill passed by Congress that would have reduced Bolsonaro’s 27 year prison sentence for his failed 2023 coup attempt. I did it publicly, at a ceremony in the presidential palace in Brasília, timed with the third anniversary of the January 8 riots, when his supporters vandalized Congress, the Supreme Court, and this very palace rather than accept my election. I told the assembled leaders that January 8 is forever marked as the day of democracy’s victory and that Brazil has no right to forget its past, nor to accept any kind of dictatorship, civilian or military.
Brazil de Fato and Agência Brasil report that this was not just a legal maneuver, it was a message: I framed the veto as a defense of democratic institutions and a warning that those who tried to seize power by force must face the full weight of the law. Analysts quoted by AP note that Congress could override my veto, but doing so months before the next general elections would be risky in a country still traumatized by the coup attempt and with me, an 80 year old leftist, still listed as a frontrunner, potentially against Bolsonaro’s son, Senator Flávio Bolsonaro.
On the foreign front, Reuters reports that I held a call with Delcy Rodríguez, Venezuela’s new interim president, after U.S. military action removed Nicolás Maduro from power. My office confirmed the call and my condemnation of Washington’s move as crossing an “unacceptable line.” Sources in my government told Reuters I phoned Rodríguez to verify what I was seeing in the media about the U.S. operation. Beyond that, Brasília has kept details deliberately sparse, but this crisis is likely to shape my image as a regional leader trying to balance Brazilian sovereignty, U.S. pressure, and South American stability. Any talk that I am secretly mediating a backroom deal between Washington and Caracas is, for now, speculation and not confirmed by official statements.
Think of these days as a snapshot of me late in life: still fighting Bolsonaro in the courts and in history, still casting myself as guardian of Brazilian democracy, and still inserting Brazil into the most dangerous conflicts of the hemisphere.
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