A samba school parade from Niterói during the 2026 Carnival honored President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, sparking debate over potential early electoral propaganda. Two electoral law experts offer opposing views: one claims elements like the number 13 and a campaign jingle amount to illegality, while the other upholds artistic freedom without an explicit vote request.
The parade of the Niterói samba school, held in February 2026, paid tribute to the trajectory of President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, raising questions in the Electoral Court. According to an analysis by Vera Chemim, a lawyer and professor of electoral law, the samba-enredo included ballot number 13, the refrain "olê, olê, olê, olá, Lula! Lula!" – a jingle linked to past campaigns – and displayed colors and symbols of the Workers' Party in parade wings. She argues this constitutes early electoral propaganda, prohibited by the Elections Law (9.504/97), as it conveys an implicit vote request, per Tribunal Superior Eleitoral (TSE) jurisprudence. Chemim highlights Lula's involvement, who invited actors, joined the track to greet the school, and promoted the samba on official party channels, along with criticisms of opponents and comparison to showmício, a banned medium. The typical penalty would be a fine of R$ 5,000 to R$ 25,000.
On the other hand, Pierpaolo Bottini, an electoral lawyer and former president of the OAB-SP Electoral Law Commission, challenges the illegality claim. He states there is no proof of imbalance in the election, misuse of public resources, or explicit vote request, such as the TSE's required "magic words" like "vote for" or "elect." Embratur's sponsorship was distributed equally among schools, and the enredo is protected by freedom of expression, allowed by law even for candidacy mentions without direct support solicitation. Bottini notes the event occurred eight months before the October 2026 elections, and classifying it as campaigning overly broadens the electoral concept, disrespecting Carnival's cultural nature. He mentions the "Streisand effect," where opposition criticisms amplify the content's visibility.
Both opinions, published in Folha de S.Paulo on February 20, 2026, stress the need for judicial review to address excesses, preserving electoral fairness without curbing cultural expressions.