Brazil’s outspoken first lady is coming under fire, but she refuses to stop speaking out

SAO PAULO (AP) — In early May, an air of triumph filled a dinner in Beijing, where Brazil’s President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva celebrated a diplomatic victory: businessmen travelling with him said they had secured billions of dollars in investments as the veteran leader renewed his international prestige standing alongside his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping.

But then Brazilian first lady Rosângela da Silva, better known as Janja, raised her hand.

Although no one was expected to speak, da Silva addressed Xi, saying that Chinese social media company TikTok posed a challenge for leftists, claiming its algorithm favors right-wingers. China’s president reportedly answered. The exchange was leaked to Brazilian media by the time dessert was served.

Lula’s government is grappling with unpopularity that has dented his credentials as the frontrunner for reelection next year. Some analysts, including members of his government, attribute this partly to his wife’s perceived overstepping in what was once a ceremonial role.

Janja, a 58-year-old sociologist, has drawn criticism for insulting tech billionaire Elon Musk, mocking the suicide of a pro-Jair Bolsonaro supporter and advising the president on how to use the military during the Jan. 8, 2023 riots in the capital, Brasilia. Still, she insists she will speak out whenever it serves the public interest.

FILE – Brazil’s former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva speaks to supporters accompanied by girlfriend Rosangela da Silva after he was released from Federal Police headquarters where he was imprisoned on corruption charges, in Curitiba, Brazil, Nov. 8, 2019. (AP Photo/Leo Correa, File)

A Datafolha poll released June 12 found that 36% of Brazilians think the first lady’s actions hurt the government, while 14% say they are helpful. It was the pollster’s first measure of the first lady’s approval.

The same poll showed Lula with a 40% job disapproval rating, an 8 percentage point increase from October 2024.

Brazil’s presidency said in a statement to The Associated Press on June 20 that da Silva adheres to the solicitor-general’s office guidelines, adding that she “acts as a citizen, combining her public visibility with the experience she has built throughout her professional career in support of relevant social issues and matters of public interest.”

‘Undue interference’

Under guidelines published by the solicitor-general’s office, the president’s spouse primarily fulfills “a symbolically representative role on behalf of the president in a social, cultural, ceremonial, political or diplomatic nature.” For many of her critics, this does not grant her the authority to speak as a government representative.

FILE – Brazil’s President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and first lady Rosangela Silva arrive to a military promotion ceremony, in Brasilia, Brazil, April 4, 2023. (AP Photo/Eraldo Peres, File)

Brazilian media have reported that government ministers, lawmakers and staunch leftist campaigners are privately raising concerns about the first lady being a hindrance more than an asset. These worries have skyrocketed since the incident in China — even as Lula himself has praised his wife for speaking out.

“It looks like Brazil is governed by a couple,” said Beatriz Rey, a political science postdoctoral and research fellow at the University of Lisbon. “When (the first lady) says there won’t be any protocols to silence her, she disrespects our democratic institutions for she has no elected office, no government position. It is not about being a woman or a feminist. It is undue interference.”

‘Present and vocal’

Lula’s first wife, Maria de Lourdes, died in 1971. His second, Marisa Letícia, died in 2017. Lula, 79, and Janja said they met in 2017 and started seeing each other frequently during the leftist leader’s 580 days in jail in the city of Curitiba between 2018 and 2019. They married in 2022.

Many supporters of Lula’s Workers’ Party partly attribute the criticism against the first lady to misinformation and disinformation. In May, the party launched the “I am with Janja” social media campaign in her defense. But the week-long effort garnered less than 100,000 views and only a few hundred comments.

FILE – First lady Rosangela da Silva receives the Order of Cultural Merit from her husband, President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, and Minister of Culture Margareth Menezes, during an awards ceremony at the Gustavo Capanema Palace in Rio de Janeiro, May 20, 2025. (AP Photo/Bruna Prado, File)

“Janja is an asset because she rejuvenates Lula, everyone in the government understands that, even her critics,” a Brazilian government source told the AP. “No one wants to alienate her. But many important people in Brasilia, friends and allies of Lula, do understand that by overstepping she brings some of her rejection to the president.”

The source, who spoke under condition of anonymity for lack of authorization to speak about the matter publicly, often travels with the president and the first lady.

Adriana Negreiros, a journalist who profiled the first lady for a 2024 podcast titled “Janja,” said that allies of the president who criticize her do it with extreme caution.

”(Janja) dances, sings, speaks out, appears at official events and meetings with heads of state. She insists on being present and vocal,” Negreiros said. “There’s a lot of sexism and misogyny directed at her, no doubt. But not all criticism is sexist.”

‘She will say what she wants’

FILE – Brazalian first lady Rosangela da Silva, right, accompanied by France’s first lady Brigitte Macron, left, speaks to students as they visit a high school Montaigne in Paris, June 5, 2025. (Bertrand Guay, AP File Photo)

Da Silva said she doesn’t go to dinners “just to accompany” her husband.

“I have common sense. I consider myself an intelligent person. So I know very well what my limits are. I’m fully aware of that,” she told a podcast of daily Folha de S. Paulo.

Da Silva did, however, express remorse during the same podcast for the expletive she used against Musk in 2024, once a close ally of U.S. President Donald Trump.

Many of Lula’s adversaries say they want the first lady to remain in the spotlight.

“The more she speaks, the more she holds a microphone, the more she helps the right wing,” said Nikolas Ferreira, one of Brazil’s most popular right-wing lawmakers.

FILE – Brazil’s President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and first lady Rosangela da Silva attend a ceremony at the Itaipu hydroelectric dam on the shared border with Paraguay, in Foz do Iguaçu, Brazil, March 16, 2023. (AP Photo/Jorge Saenz, File)

Ferreira, a prominent social media figure, claims the role of regulating social media is a matter for Brazil’s Congress, not for the first lady to debate with foreign leaders like Xi.

Da Silva is also expected to play as a keen hostess at the BRICS summit in Rio on July 6-7, a role her husband is almost certain not to oppose.

“She will be wherever she wants,” Lula told journalists in March following criticism for sending the first lady as his representative to a nutrition summit in Paris that month.

“She will say what she wants and go wherever she wants.”

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Brazil’s President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and his wife Rosangela da Silva arrive to announce a housing program for the Moinho Favela, in Sao Paulo, Thursday, June, 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Ettore Chiereguini)

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