Universal and quality public health is a consensus in our society, right? It is a thesis defended and supported by everyone ... Actually, it’s not quite like that. Twice in the Lula and Dilma governments conservative forces joined together to overthrow proposals to ensure more funding and expand medical care in underserved areas and cities: the Provisional Contribution on Financial Transactions (CPMF) and the More Doctors program.

Defeating the government in the National Congress in late 2007, these conservative forces succeeded in ending the CPMF. From night to day, R$ 40 billion annually was removed from the Federal Budget. These were the funds the 0.38% tax on checks provided the Single Health System (SUS). The opposition's goal was to hurt President Lula and weaken his government, to defeat him in the 2010 elections. But it was the people who paid bill, the people's health
Six years later, a new attack tried to derail the More Doctors program, designed to offer poorest Brazilians the same access to physicians that the middle class and the rich have always had. Prejudice and lies once again were used to try to harm Dilma on the eve of the 2014 election and, once again, the victims were the poorer classes — those most in need of a public health system that was better and more inclusive.
But neither Lula nor Dilma bowed to pressure. The result is that, even without the CPMF, never has there been so much invested in health in Brazil as in these last 12 years: per capita use increased from R$ 244.80 in 2003 to R$ 413.00 in 2013. In addition, the More Doctors program has become a reality that benefits 50 million Brazilians.