The strategy of Lula's government allies is to leave Moro 'isolated and without political influence' in the Senate.
The idea is to ignore the biased former judge to prevent him from becoming a leader of the opposition, despite the assessment that he lacks the capacity for such a role.
247 - Members of the elected government of Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva (PT) and the PT party have decided to ignore the presence of the former biased judge and now senator-elect Sergio Moro (União Brasil-PR) in Congress, without engaging in confrontations with him, reports Bela Megale of the newspaper. The Globe.
"The plan is to ignore the former judge as much as possible and avoid conflicts that could allow Moro to position himself for a leadership role in the opposition," the report says.
On the other hand, PT congressmen will be on alert to block punitive initiatives from the former judge. "The idea is to work to leave the former judge 'isolated and without political influence'. Therefore, a large part of the PT leadership argues that Moro should be ignored and that the government and parliamentarians who support Lula should avoid confrontations that give space to the former judge."
There is also the assessment that Moro, due to a lack of political skill, will encounter difficulties in Congress and that, therefore, he will not be able to embody a leadership role in the opposition to Lula.
Furthermore, União Brasil, chaired by Luciano Bivar, is considering joining Lula's support base in Congress, which would further weaken Moro.
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