JUSTICE ORCHESTRATES MASSIVE COVER-UP: ELECTORAL COURT ORDERS DESTRUCTION OF VICE-GOVERNOR’S ADS ACROSS ENTIRE STATE
A regional electoral court in Pará has launched a sweeping crackdown, demanding the ERASURE of every single one of Vice-Governor Hana Ghassan’s political billboards. The order gives officials just 48 hours to wipe her image from the landscape.
This isn’t about minor violations. The judge’s explosive ruling points to the VISUAL EVIDENCE: billboards plastered across multiple cities screaming “2026 CAN COME” and “LET’S ADVANCE MORE.” The court documents, seen by reporters, show a chilling pattern. In the ads, the word “GOVERNOR” is blasted in huge letters, while her actual title, “VICE,” is shrunk to near-invisibility. The judge called it a “structured political communication strategy” – a calculated scheme to hijack the next election years in advance.
Who benefits from this media blackout? The order forces advertising companies to dismantle the signs and provide PHOTOGRAPHIC PROOF they obeyed. But in a shocking twist, the court REFUSED to directly punish the Vice-Governor herself, claiming “lack of proof” she ordered the campaign, despite admitting she “must have known” about the massive operation.
This is a dangerous escalation. While one party’s complaint triggered the action, the real story is the aggressive silencing of political imagery before an election cycle even begins. They are scrubbing the public space clean.
They think deleting the signs will delete the ambition. They are wrong.
Edited for Kayitsi.com



