
Lula warns Trump to stay out of Brazil’s elections after G7 clash
The Brazilian president’s rebuke in Geneva followed Donald Trump’s description of the country as “politically difficult” and his criticism of a detention linked to the Bolsonaro family.
Brazil’s president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, issued a blunt warning to Donald Trump on Wednesday, telling his American counterpart to “not meddle” in the country’s October elections. Speaking at a press conference after the G7 summit in Évian, France, where he was an invited guest, Lula insisted that Trump could hold whatever electoral preferences he wished, but that “the elections in Brazil are a problem for Brazil, just as American elections are their problem, not mine.” The remarks, carried widely by Brazilian and regional media, marked a sharp escalation in rhetoric between the two leaders, who had met cordially in Washington only a month earlier.
The immediate trigger was Trump’s own intervention from the summit sidelines. The US president had described Brazil as “a little dangerous, politically” and expressed displeasure over the detention of a figure linked to the Bolsonaro family, apparently confusing surnames. Trump’s comments were widely interpreted as a reference to legal proceedings against Eduardo Bolsonaro, a former federal deputy and son of ex-president Jair Bolsonaro, a close Trump ally. The American leader’s recent designation of two Brazilian organised crime groups as terrorist organisations had already irritated Brasília, prompting Lula to retort that Brazil was “not a pushover country.”
Viewed from Brasília, the spat carries immediate electoral weight. Lula, 80, is seeking a fourth term with Senator Flávio Bolsonaro—another son of the former president—emerging as his principal rival. Trump’s open affinity for the Bolsonaro clan is seen by Lula’s camp as an attempt to tilt the playing field. In his Geneva remarks, Lula went so far as to offer a tutorial: “Next time, I’ll bring an electronic voting machine to show him how it works,” a pointed jab at Trump’s history of election denialism. Argentine and French outlets noted the symbolic force of the gesture, coming at a summit dedicated to democratic cooperation.
European observers see the exchange as symptomatic of a broader tension in hemispheric relations. Trump’s transactional approach to Latin America, favouring ideological allies, has long unsettled governments that prize multilateralism. Lula’s insistence on “respect for Brazil, just as I have for the United States” was calibrated to appeal to a global audience weary of great-power interference. Analysts in London note that while the G7 invitation signalled Lula’s international rehabilitation, the clash underscored the limits of that goodwill when core sovereignty issues arise.
Looking ahead, the episode is unlikely to be the last flashpoint before the 4 October vote. Lula’s team is expected to continue framing the election as a choice between national dignity and external meddling, a narrative that resonates in a country sensitive to historical US influence. For Washington, the risk is that overt partisanship could backfire, strengthening Lula’s hand among voters who might otherwise be sceptical of his leftist record. The electronic voting machine, a Brazilian innovation long praised for its efficiency, may yet become an unlikely symbol of a campaign fought on the terrain of democratic self-determination.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 4 languages
Lula firmly rejected Trump's interference, stressing that Brazil's elections are a domestic matter. He defended national sovereignty, noting that US elections are likewise none of his business.
At the G7 summit, President Lula responded to Trump's comments by asking him not to interfere in Brazil's upcoming elections. The exchange underscores diplomatic tensions, with Lula asserting that each country's electoral process is its own affair.
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