São Paulo's Tarcísio de Freitas ties Maduro's US capture to Brazil's 2026 elections

Following the US military capture of Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro on January 3, 2026, São Paulo Governor Tarcísio de Freitas (Republicanos) posted a video from vacation, celebrating the event, accusing President Lula of supporting the regime, and explicitly linking it to Brazil's 2026 presidential race. The move drew a sharp rebuke from PT Minister Gleisi Hoffmann.

On January 4, 2026, while on vacation until January 11, Governor Tarcísio de Freitas posted a self-written video on social media hailing the US operation that captured Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores after bombing Caracas. Maduro faces US trial for narcoterrorism and drug trafficking.

Tarcísio spotlighted Venezuela's dictatorship ills, accused Lula (PT) of backing Maduro, and concluded: "Venezuela is now defeating the left, and may Brazil also win by the end of the year," eyeing the October 2026 elections. His wife, first lady Cristiane Freitas, echoed: "A great victory for the Venezuelan people. May we Brazilians also celebrate at the end of the 2026 elections!"

The post resonated with Bolsonarista supporters and allies view it as a presidential bid signal, despite Tarcísio's focus on state reelection. Notably, he avoided mentioning Donald Trump, differing from past alignment strained by US tariffs on Brazilian goods in 2025.

PT Minister Gleisi Hoffmann (Institutional Relations) fired back: "Tarcísio Freitas, who wore Trump's hat, celebrated the tariff hike against Brazil, supported Eduardo Bolsonaro's betrayal, defended amnesty for coup plotters, now blames Lula for the US invasion of Venezuela. That's a lot of cynicism."

In an O Estado de S. Paulo interview, Tarcísio blamed Brazil's failure to lead Venezuela's transition on PT-Maduro ties: "We can criticize the means... But something needed to be done and it was done."

This follows his January 1 video equating "Happy 2026 = Out PT." Allies praised the Venezuela post's strategic tone to rally the right. (See prior coverage on broader Brazilian reactions.)

Relaterede artikler

Illustration of Bolsonaro allies clashing outside Papudinha prison amid tensions over 2026 election candidacies.
Billede genereret af AI

Bolsonaro allies clash over Papudinha transfer and 2026 race

Rapporteret af AI Billede genereret af AI

Following Jair Bolsonaro's transfer to Brasília's Papudinha facility, tensions erupted among his supporters over the 2026 elections, with public spats between backers of Flávio Bolsonaro and São Paulo Governor Tarcísio de Freitas. Tarcísio confirmed efforts for house arrest, but the move fueled clan divisions as allies push for candidacies.

The US military operation capturing Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro on January 3, 2026, has polarized Brazil's political landscape ahead of the 2026 elections. Bolsonaro allies celebrated it as the fall of dictatorship, attacking Lula, while the president condemned violations of sovereignty.

Rapporteret af AI

A week after the U.S. captured Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro, President Lula dismissed its electoral fallout—alongside Brazil's public security woes—as minimal for his 2026 bid, prioritizing economic gains with new 2025 welfare initiatives amid opposition attacks.

Senator Flávio Bolsonaro spoke at CPAC 2026 in the US, likening his father Jair Bolsonaro to former President Donald Trump, and accused President Lula of favoring criminal factions and aligning with US adversaries. In a 15-minute speech, he advocated for Brazil's realignment with Washington and promised a right-wing victory in elections.

Rapporteret af AI

Four days after U.S. forces captured Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro on January 3, 2026, on charges of drug trafficking and human rights violations, a new Áltica poll across nine Latin American countries highlights divides between governments and publics. While leaders like Colombia's Gustavo Petro condemned the operation as a 'kidnapping,' majorities in Colombia (75%) and Chile showed pragmatic support amid border and security concerns.

Federal deputy Júlia Zanatta (PL-SC), a Bolsonaro ally, filed a request for information from the Civil House to clarify President Lula's involvement in Brazil's official stance on Nicolás Maduro's capture by the US operation in Venezuela. She seeks details on directives to omit Maduro's name and questions the exclusive condemnation of the American action. The request aims for an exception to the parliamentary recess due to the urgency of the events.

Rapporteret af AI

Two former ministers from Bolsonaro's government, Gilson Machado and Marcelo Queiroga, posted a video on social media urging support for Flávio Bolsonaro in the 2026 elections. Electoral law experts view the action as premature campaign propaganda, which is illegal under Brazilian law. Congressman Lindbergh Farias has filed a complaint with the TSE against the post.

 

 

 

Dette websted bruger cookies

Vi bruger cookies til analyse for at forbedre vores side. Læs vores privatlivspolitik for mere information.
Afvis