Brazil closed 2025 having weathered intense political and social tests and begins 2026 with a clearer sense of purpose. The past year was marked less by easy victories and more by sustained contestation — over representation, the public good and how the state balances stability with social justice. Citizens, civil society and social movements forced debates that might otherwise have been decided behind closed doors.
Electoral contests for the Senate and the Chamber of Deputies sharpened questions about alliances and democratic resilience. A ministerial reshuffle illustrated how governing requires constant negotiation with forces that do not always prioritise equality or social rights. Yet the public response was notable. Women, Black movements, Indigenous groups, LGBTI communities and peripheral neighbourhoods increased their presence in national debates and resisted elite bargains that excluded them.
Brazil BRICS presidency and the turn to multipolarity
On the international stage, Brazil’s presidency of BRICS in 2025 helped reposition the country within the Global South. The administration emphasised cooperation, multipolarity and solidarity at a time when global fragmentation has intensified. That posture reinforced Brazil’s diplomatic profile even as internal contradictions persisted. Engagement in BRICS opened space for diplomatic outreach and underscored the government’s willingness to pursue alternatives to traditional power structures.
Climate and environment remained central. With COP30 scheduled for Belém, the Amazon became more than a policy item; it was a matter of global consequence, where sovereignty, survival and climate justice intersect. Women in riverine communities, Indigenous territories, fields and forests played leading roles in conservation and rights advocacy. Their activism framed environmental care as inseparable from social justice.
Domestic policy debates also matured. Controlling inflation while protecting workers brought fiscal policy into ethical territory. Discussions on austerity could no longer be purely technical because cuts have disproportionate effects by gender, race and geography. The year’s inquiries into former President Jair Bolsonaro served not only to examine individual conduct but to confront political cultures that normalised violence, disinformation and attacks on institutions.
Public security continued to expose institutional weaknesses. The delegation of near-autonomous powers to police forces creates risks to democratic accountability when force is used without adequate oversight. This dynamic revealed deeper questions about sovereignty and effective institutional control.
Looking ahead, 2026 offers a prospect of consolidation rather than escapism. The lessons of 2025 have sharpened public awareness of intersecting injustices and increased demands for representation, environmental responsibility and social repair. Progress will require sustained investment in social policies, stronger democratic oversight and an insistence that human dignity is not negotiable.
Political change will not be immediate. Still, the growing social consciousness — more explicitly feminist and intersectional — provides a foundation for a year of assertion. If 2025 was a year of crossings, 2026 can be the year Brazil transforms those crossings into firmer commitments to equality, climate action and international cooperation under the banner of the BRICS presidency.
As the country moves forward, the public expectation is clear: do not accept less than what is deserved and ensure that no life is treated as expendable.
Key Takeaways:
- Brazil’s 2025 tested democratic resilience and heightened social mobilisation, especially among women, Black, Indigenous and LGBTI communities.
- Fiscal debates shifted from technicalities to ethics, with austerity scrutinised for its gender and racial impacts.
- Brazil BRICS presidency helped reposition the country towards cooperation, multipolarity and a stronger Global South voice.
- Environmental and public security challenges demand long-term policy, social investment and accountability in 2026.

















