Lula da Silva – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Sat, 09 May 2026 11:14:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/cropped-cropped-app-logo-32x32.png Lula da Silva – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 Tariffs and rare earths: Lula da Silva positions Brazil as a global player in U.S. visit https://artifex.news/article70958713-ece/ Sat, 09 May 2026 11:14:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70958713-ece/ Read More “Tariffs and rare earths: Lula da Silva positions Brazil as a global player in U.S. visit” »

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Early this week, when Brazilian President Lula da Silva’s sudden trip to Washington was announced, Brasilia was rife with speculation over whether the visit had something to do with the upcoming elections. The buzz intensified when Flávio Bolsonaro, the presumptive far-right candidate, flew to Miami a day before Mr. Lula’s meeting with Donald Trump on Thursday (May 8, 2026).

While Flávio went to mingle with his allies of the American right, Lula arrived in Washington with important state matters on his agenda — tariffs, rare earth minerals and global conflicts. With ties between the two countries increasingly acrimonious, tension was palpable when Lula landed in Washington.

Red carpet welcome

But Mr. Trump received Mr. Lula warmly on a red carpet at the White House before they entered talks that stretched for three hours. Though no joint statement was issued after the meeting, both leaders released positive statements. Posting on his social media platform, Mr. Trump described the talks as “very good” and praised Lula as a “very dynamic” leader. Lula, too, called the talks an “important step” in bilateral relations. “I leave the meeting satisfied. I do not have a forbidden subject. The only thing we do not give up is our democracy and our sovereignty,” the Brazilian President said.

Tariffs were the first issue on the table. Last year, Mr. Trump had imposed 50% tariffs on Brazilian goods. Fears of new sanctions have persisted as Washington recently opened a probe into Brazil’s digital payment platform PIX, often compared to India’s UPI system. But the meeting produced a breakthrough, with both sides agreeing to establish a working group on tariffs. Lula said he personally proposed the mechanism, which would bring together the groups of both countries to negotiate a solution within 30 days. “Whoever is wrong will yield. If we have to yield, we will yield,” Mr. Lula said in Washington.

Breathing room

According to Brazilian sources, the 30-day period will not only give Brasília some breathing room but also help prepare for another meeting between Mr. Trump and Mr. Lula at the G7 summit in France next month. “This time frame has been prepared with the G7 meeting in mind,” a Brazilian official said on condition of anonymity. “Now, we can expect intense discussions between the two sides and, if things go well, perhaps even an announcement at the G7 summit.”

The White House visit is already being seen as a win for Mr. Lula. While the two Presidents discussed tariffs and rare earth minerals, they avoided contentious issues such as PIX and the possible classification of Brazilian criminal factions as “terrorist” organisations — a proposal Mr. Trump has pushed for months. “Now Trump will think twice before taking decisions contrary to our interests. Lula having used the word ‘sovereignty’ repeatedly was essential,” said Celso Amorim, the Brazilian President’s special adviser on foreign policy.

But it was the discussion on rare-earth minerals that projected the real strategic purpose of Lula’s Washington visit. As Mr. Trump prepares for a summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping next week, Brazil has suddenly found itself at the centre of the growing competition between the U.S. and China. Home to the world’s second-largest reserves of critical minerals, Brazil is seen by the U.S. as a potential alternative to China in global supply chains.

American investments

In Washington, Lula resisted pressure to align Brazil exclusively with Washington on critical minerals, but he did not shut the door on American investments. “We have to follow these things more precisely. We have a lot of interest in the US investing again in Brazil,” Mr. Lula said. However, Mr. Lula made it clear that Brazil would not accept the old model of exporting raw wealth without domestic gains. “So, with rare earths, we are going to change our behavior. We want Brazil to be the great winner of this wealth that nature gave us.”

The rare-earth push is also part of Brazil’s attempt to position itself as a major global player, without ruffling feathers in China – its biggest trading partner and investor. A day before Mr. Lula’s trip, the Brazilian Congress passed a Bill creating a legal framework for critical minerals and rare earths. After Lula’s meeting with Mr. Trump, the government said the Bill could be approved by the Senate as early as this month. “I told President Trump about the law on critical minerals and also about the setting up of a Council which will treat the issue of critical minerals as a matter of national sovereignty,” Mr. Lula said after the meeting.

If Mr. Lula used rare earths to project Brazil’s global role, he was equally careful to protect his domestic turf. Despite intense speculation before the trip, Lula made sure that the country’s upcoming election did not feature in his chat with Mr. Trump. That was politically significant given the close ties between Mr. Trump and the Bolsonaro clan. As speculation persisted in the media, Lula denied he spoke about elections with Mr. Trump. “There is no possibility of me discussing this subject with any president. This is a Brazilian issue. They know that; they are presidents too,” Mr. Lula said.

The meeting in Washington was the third between Lula and Mr. Trump since the Republican leader returned to the White House in 2025. At their first encounter in September last year, Mr. Trump had remarked that the two leaders shared “excellent chemistry.” The latest meeting took place in a far more tense climate. But Brazilian analysts believe Lula emerged from Washington with a victory. “Many people thought that Lula would fall into some trap or that they would prepare an ambush, as happened with other heads of state, but none of that happened,” said Ricardo Kotscho, a prominent political commentator in Brazil. “From his arrival to the statements by President Trump and the photographs released, it shows that it was a great success and a diplomatic victory for Lula.”

Mr. Lula went to Washington just days before Trump’s high-stakes trip to Beijing. With the two leaders expected to meet again at the G7 Summit in June, the negotiations over tariffs and rare earths could only intensify in coming weeks.

Published – May 09, 2026 04:05 pm IST



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Donald Trump must treat all countries equally, says Brazil President Lula Da Silva to U.S. President https://artifex.news/article70662557-ece/ Sun, 22 Feb 2026 06:49:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70662557-ece/ Read More “Donald Trump must treat all countries equally, says Brazil President Lula Da Silva to U.S. President” »

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Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva gestures during a press conference in New Delhi.
| Photo Credit: Reuters

Brazil’s President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva on Sunday (February 22, 2026) urged U.S. President Donald Trump to treat all countries equally after the U.S. leader imposed a 15% tariff on imports following an adverse Supreme Court ruling.

“I want to tell the U.S. President Donald Trump that we don’t want a new Cold War. We don’t want interference in any other country, we want all countries to be treated equally,” Mr. Lula told reporters in New Delhi.

The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday (February 20, 2026) ruled six to three that a 1977 law Mr. Trump has relied on to slap sudden levies on individual countries, upending global trade, “does not authorize the President to impose tariffs”.

Mr. Lula said he would not like to react to Supreme Court decisions of another country, but hoped that Brazil’s relations with the United States “will go back to normalcy” soon.

The veteran Brazilian leader is expected to travel to Washington next month for a meeting with Mr. Trump.

“I am convinced that Brazil-US relation will go back to normalcy after our conversation,” Mr. Lula, 80, said, adding Brazil only wanted to “live in peace, generate jobs, and improve lives of our people”.

Ties between Brazil and the United States appear to be on the mend after months of animosity between Washington and Brasilia.

As a result, Trump’s administration has exempted key Brazilian exports from 40 percent tariffs that had been imposed on on the South American country last year.

“The world doesn’t need more turbulence, it needs peace,” said Mr. Lula who arrived in India on Wednesday (February 18, 2026) to attend a summit on artificial intelligence.

On Saturday (February 21, 2026), India and Brazil agreed to boost cooperation on critical minerals and rare earths and signed a raft of other deals after a meeting between Lula and Prime Minister Narendra Modi.



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Brazil’s President Lula To Undergo Surgery To Reduce Cranial Bleeding Risk https://artifex.news/brazils-president-lula-da-silva-to-undergo-surgery-to-reduce-cranial-bleeding-risk-7227682/ Wed, 11 Dec 2024 21:13:55 +0000 https://artifex.news/brazils-president-lula-da-silva-to-undergo-surgery-to-reduce-cranial-bleeding-risk-7227682/ Read More “Brazil’s President Lula To Undergo Surgery To Reduce Cranial Bleeding Risk” »

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Sao Paulo:

Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva will undergo another operation Thursday to “minimize the risk of future bleeding” in an area under his skull that received emergency surgery this week, his doctor said.

The 79-year-old president’s doctor, Roberto Kalil, told journalists on Wednesday outside the Hospital Sirio-Libanes where Lula is convalescing that the procedure was an “expected” follow-up to the surgery carried out on Tuesday.

The hospital said in a medical bulletin: “As part of his treatment, complementary to the surgery, an endovascular procedure (embolization of the middle meningeal artery) will be carried out tomorrow morning.”

The facility added that Lula was otherwise well.

On Wednesday, it said, he “carried out physiotherapy, walked and received family visits.”

Doctors performed emergency surgery Tuesday on Lula to relieve pressure on his brain from bleeding in cranial membranes linked to a fall he had in October, in a bathroom at the presidential residence.

After complaining of a headache in Brasilia on Monday, an MRI scan found a hemorrhage between his brain and the dura mater membrane that protects it.

He was rushed to the Hospital Sirio-Libanes — the country’s top medical facility — where doctors carried out a trepanation, involving drilling through his skull to relieve pressure.

Earlier Wednesday, the hospital said Lula was alert and had “progressed well” since the surgery, “without incident.”

In a post-surgery news conference on Tuesday, his medical team said he had suffered no brain damage.

They said he would spend a couple of days in intensive care, under observation, and he was expected to be released from hospital next week.

After suffering his fall on October 19, Lula told an official from his Workers’ Party that the accident had been “serious”.

In the weeks following, the president skipped planned overseas trips. But from mid-November he resumed his active schedule, hosting a G20 summit in Rio and attending a Mercosur summit last week in Uruguay.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)




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