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Philippines midterm results to shape futures of Duterte and Marcos clans
Philippines midterm results to shape futures of Duterte and Marcos clans

ABC News

time14-05-2025

  • Politics
  • ABC News

Philippines midterm results to shape futures of Duterte and Marcos clans

On paper, some 18,000 national and local seats were up for grabs at the Philippines midterm election. But for two families, there was much more at stake. The Marcos and Duterte clans were vying for ongoing power and political control over their respective destinies. The families won a landslide victory as allies in 2022, but the relationship has spectacularly soured. As the final votes are tallied, here's what we know about the results that could shape the future of politics in the Philippines. The fractured relationship between the Marcos and Duterte clans started shortly after the election in 2022. In the past year however, it's fallen through completely. President Ferdinand Marcos Jr's allies helped impeach Vice-President Sara Duterte for plotting an assassination against him and allegedly misusing millions of dollars of public funds. The vice-president then accused the Marcos administration of helping to deport her father, Rodrigo Duterte, to the International Criminal Court in The Hague, where he faces crimes against humanity charges linked to his war on drugs while president. Of the 12 Senate seats up for grabs in Monday's midterm election, political analyst Richard Heydarian said that up to five may go to Duterte-aligned candidates. That's significant because nine votes in the 24-seat Senate would successfully block a conviction against Sara Duterte. A conviction would bar her from running for office at the next presidential election in 2028. He said he expects she will get the required backing to block a conviction, if a trial even goes ahead. "She may even have more [Senate support] because they [Duterte-aligned candidates] have done so well," Mr Heydarian told the ABC's The World program from Manila. "Senators who have ambitions down the road in 2028 … seeing the 'House of Marcos' potentially sinking, they are already soft-peddling, so we may not even see a trial." He said any trial and ultimate outcome would come down to the handful of "independent-minded and progressive senators … to do the heavy lifting". "Otherwise just like Donald Trump last year in the US, we're going to see a comeback story for another controversial populist family in the case of the Philippines. "If the Dutertes' come back, it's retribution time. "Marcos's best chance is to get a coalition together to impeach Sara Duterte, and if he fails to do that, he going to be quite in trouble [at the 2028 election]." Despite being nearly 11,500 kilometres away in The Hague, former president Rodrigo Duterte was elected mayor of Davao City — a position he held for two decades before rising to the country's highest office. He's unlikely to step foot in Davao City, as he awaits a possible trial. However for one of the most powerful political families in the Philippines, it's a problem solved conveniently. His son, Sebastian, the current mayor of the city, was elected as vice-mayor and will serve in his father's absence. The vice-mayor vacancy will likely be filled by a councillor, named Rodrigo Duterte II. Mr Heydarian said the government was also out-performed in other areas of the country too. "It's not just Davao City — Manila City … Baguio City … Cebu City — most of these have been won by the opposition or Duterte-friendly elements," he said. He said the liberal progressive opposition targeted the government on issues of governance, accountability, the budget and alleged concerns over corruption. On the other side, the Duterte family rallied after Rodrigo Duterte was sent to The Hague, with a call to "protect" Sara Duterte, the heir-apparent, from being impeached. "Those two elements came together and that's why the administration was essentially squeezed in the middle," Mr Heydarian said. He said many officials that were elected are government aligned, which gave Mr Marcos Jr some support to "go for broke" to keep the Dutertes in check ahead of the 2028 presidential poll.

The Philippines has voted - now the game of thrones begin again
The Philippines has voted - now the game of thrones begin again

Yahoo

time13-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

The Philippines has voted - now the game of thrones begin again

As the noise and colour of a two-month election campaign subsides, a game of thrones between the two most powerful families in the Philippines resumes. President Ferdinand "Bongbong" Marcos Jr, and his Vice-President, Sara Duterte, are embroiled in a bitter feud, and a battle for power. As allies they won a landslide victory in the last presidential election in 2022. But as their relationship has fractured - he accusing her of threatening to assassinate him, she accusing him of incompetence and saying she dreamed of decapitating him - this mid-term election has become a critical barometer of the strength of these two political dynasties. And the results were not great news for the Marcos camp. Typically incumbent presidents in the Philippines get most of their picks for the senate elected in the mid-term election. The power of presidential patronage is a significant advantage, at least it has been in the past. But not this time. Only six of the twelve winning senators are from the Marcos alliance, and of those one, Camille Villar, is only half in his camp, as she also accepted endorsement from Sara Duterte. Four of the senators are in the Duterte camp, including the president's sister Imee Marcos. Two were in the top three vote-winners, ahead of any Marcos candidate. For a sitting president, this is a poor result. Senators are elected on a simple, nationwide vote, which is a good indication of national opinion. The result could weaken the authority of the Marcos administration in the last three years of his term, and it casts doubt on the plan to incapacitate Sara Duterte by impeaching her. The Marcos-Duterte relationship has been deteriorating almost since the start of their administration three years ago. But it was only this year that it ruptured completely. The decision by the president's allies in Congress to start impeaching the vice-president was the first irreparable breach. Then in March President Marcos sent Sara's father, former president Rodrigo Duterte, to the International Criminal Court to face charges of crimes against humanity over his brutal war on drugs. The police have also now filed criminal charges against her. The gloves were off. Impeachment would result in Sara Duterte being barred from public office, ending her ambition to replace President Marcos at the next election. Right now she is the frontrunner, and few doubt that, if successful, she would use the power of the presidency to seek vengeance against the Marcos's. But impeachment requires two thirds of the 24-seat senate to vote for it, which is why this mid-term election mattered so much to both camps. Politics in the Philippines is a family business. Once a family achieves political power, it holds onto it, and passes it around the various generations. While there are around 200 influential families, the Dutertes and Marcoses sit at the top of the pyramid. The Marcoses have been in politics for 80 years. The current president's father ruled from 1965 to 1986, imposing martial law, and plundering billions of dollars from the national purse. Bongbong Marcos' mother, Imelda, who at the age of 95 cast her vote in this election from a wheelchair, is an even more notorious figure, and not just for her shoe collection. His sister Imee has been re-elected to the senate, thanks to her decision to defect to the Duterte camp. His eldest son Sandro is a congressman, and his cousin Martin Romualdez is speaker of the lower house and a likely presidential candidate in 2028 - probably the reason why Bongbong Marcos was so keen to drive through the impeachment of Sara Duterte. In the president's home province of Ilocos Norte, his wife's cousin has been elected governor, his nephew elected vice-governor, and two other cousins elected as city councillors. Up there, Marcoses always win. Much the same is true of the Dutertes in their stronghold in Davao at the other end of the country. Even from his prison cell in The Hague, former President Duterte ran for mayor of Davao, and won easily, even though all voters got to see of him was a life-size cardboard cutout. His absence will not matter though, because the previous mayor was his son Sebastian, who now takes over the vice-mayor's job. Dutertes have been mayors of Davao for 34 out of the last 37 years. The problem confronting both camps is that the senators also typically come from big political families, or are celebrities in their own right – many candidates come from a media or showbiz background. They have interests and ambitions of their own. Even if officially allied with one camp or the other, there is no guarantee they will stay loyal, especially on the issue of impeachment. "Senators in the Philippines are very sensitive to national public opinion, because they imagine themselves as vice presidents or presidents in-waiting," says Cleve Arguelles, a political scientist who runs WR Numero Research, which monitors public opinion. "So, they are always trying to read the public mind, and side with public opinion because of their future political ambitions." In recent months public sentiment has not been on the president's side. Bongbong Marcos has never been a good public speaker, and his stage appearances in the campaign did little to lift his flagging popularity. His management of the economy, which is struggling, gets low marks in opinion polls, and his decision to detain former President Duterte and send him to the International Criminal Court is being portrayed by the Duterte family as a national betrayal. At an impromptu rally in Tondo, a low-income neighbourhood in Manila's port area, Sara Duterte played an emotionally-charged video of the moment her father was taken into custody at Manila's international airport and put on a private jet to The Hague. She portrayed this as unforgivable treatment of a still popular former president. "They didn't just kidnap my dad, they stole him from us," she told the cheering crowd. Also on stage was President Marcos's elder sister Imee, who disagreed with the extradition and jumped ship to the Duterte camp – though most observers view this as a cynical move to capitalise on Duterte popular support, so she could lift her own flagging campaign to retain her senate seat. It worked. From polling low through much of the campaign, Imee Marcos managed to scrape into the "magic twelve", as they call the winning senators. What happens now is difficult to predict, but the Marcos camp certainly faces an uphill battle to get Sara Duterte impeached. Bongbong Marcos: The Philippine president battling the Dutertes Sara Duterte: The 'alpha' VP who picked a fight with Philippines' president Of the 24 senators, only a handful are automatically loyal to the president. The rest will have to be persuaded to go along with it, , and that won't be easy. This election has shown that the Dutertes still have very strong public support in some areas, and some in the Marcos election alliance are already on record as saying they oppose impeaching the vice-president. The same goes for the 12 senators who were not up for election this year. One bright spot for the president could be the surprise election of senators Bam Aquino and Francis Pangilinan, both from the liberal wing of politics. Few polls had predicted their wins, which suggest a public desire for politicians outside the Marcos-Duterte feud. Neither is a friend of the Marcos clan – liberals were the main opposition to the Marcos-Duterte team in the 2022 election. But they were strongly opposed to the strongman style of former President Duterte, and may fear his pugnacious daughter becoming president in 2028. That may be enough to get them to vote for impeachment. The impeachment trial is expected to start in July. The Dutertes can be expected to continue chipping away at the president's battered authority in public, and both camps will be lobbying furiously behind the scenes to get senators onto their side. No president or vice-president has ever been successfully impeached in the Philippines. Nor have any president and vice president ever fallen out so badly. It is going to be a turbulent year. Not enough power to share: The political feud behind Rodrigo Duterte's downfall Death threats and division: A political feud takes a dramatic turn

Phlippines election result: The votes are in - now the game of thrones between Marcos and Duterte begins again
Phlippines election result: The votes are in - now the game of thrones between Marcos and Duterte begins again

BBC News

time13-05-2025

  • Politics
  • BBC News

Phlippines election result: The votes are in - now the game of thrones between Marcos and Duterte begins again

As the noise and colour of a two-month election campaign subsides, a game of thrones between the two most powerful families in the Philippines Ferdinand "Bongbong" Marcos Jr, and his Vice-President, Sara Duterte, are embroiled in a bitter feud, and a battle for power. As allies they won a landslide victory in the last presidential election in 2022. But as their relationship has fractured - he accusing her of threatening to assassinate him, she accusing him of incompetence and saying she dreamed of decapitating him - this mid-term election has become a critical barometer of the strength of these two political the results were not great news for the Marcos camp. Typically incumbent presidents in the Philippines get most of their picks for the senate elected in the mid-term election. The power of presidential patronage is a significant advantage, at least it has been in the past. But not this six of the twelve winning senators are from the Marcos alliance, and of those one, Camille Villar, is only half in his camp, as she also accepted endorsement from Sara Duterte. Four of the senators are in the Duterte camp, including the president's sister Imee Marcos. Two were in the top three vote-winners, ahead of any Marcos candidate. For a sitting president, this is a poor result. Senators are elected on a simple, nationwide vote, which is a good indication of national opinion. The result could weaken the authority of the Marcos administration in the last three years of his term, and it casts doubt on the plan to incapacitate Sara Duterte by impeaching Marcos-Duterte relationship has been deteriorating almost since the start of their administration three years ago. But it was only this year that it ruptured completely. The decision by the president's allies in Congress to start impeaching the vice-president was the first irreparable breach. Then in March President Marcos sent Sara's father, former president Rodrigo Duterte, to the International Criminal Court to face charges of crimes against humanity over his brutal war on drugs. The police have also now filed criminal charges against gloves were off. Impeachment would result in Sara Duterte being barred from public office, ending her ambition to replace President Marcos at the next election. Right now she is the frontrunner, and few doubt that, if successful, she would use the power of the presidency to seek vengeance against the Marcos' impeachment requires two thirds of the 24-seat senate to vote for it, which is why this mid-term election mattered so much to both camps. Politics in the Philippines is a family business. Once a family achieves political power, it holds onto it, and passes it around the various generations. While there are around 200 influential families, the Dutertes and Marcoses sit at the top of the pyramid. The Marcoses have been in politics for 80 years. The current president's father ruled from 1965 to 1986, imposing martial law, and plundering billions of dollars from the national purse. Bongbong Marcos' mother, Imelda, who at the age of 95 cast her vote in this election from a wheelchair, is an even more notorious figure, and not just for her shoe sister Imee has been re-elected to the senate, thanks to her decision to defect to the Duterte camp. His eldest son Sandro is a congressman, and his cousin Martin Romualdez is speaker of the lower house and a likely presidential candidate in 2028 - probably the reason why Bongbong Marcos was so keen to drive through the impeachment of Sara Duterte. In the president's home province of Ilocos Norte, his wife's cousin has been elected governor, his nephew elected vice-governor, and two other cousins elected as city councillors. Up there, Marcoses always the same is true of the Dutertes in their stronghold in Davao at the other end of the country. Even from his prison cell in The Hague, former President Duterte ran for mayor of Davao, and won easily, even though all voters got to see of him was a life-size cardboard cutout. His absence will not matter though, because the previous mayor was his son Sebastian, who now takes over the vice-mayor's job. Dutertes have been mayors of Davao for 34 out of the last 37 problem confronting both camps is that the senators also typically come from big political families, or are celebrities in their own right – many candidates come from a media or showbiz background. They have interests and ambitions of their own. Even if officially allied with one camp or the other, there is no guarantee they will stay loyal, especially on the issue of impeachment."Senators in the Philippines are very sensitive to national public opinion, because they imagine themselves as vice presidents or presidents in-waiting," says Cleve Arguelles, a political scientist who runs WR Numero Research, which monitors public opinion."So, they are always trying to read the public mind, and side with public opinion because of their future political ambitions." In recent months public sentiment has not been on the president's side. Bongbong Marcos has never been a good public speaker, and his stage appearances in the campaign did little to lift his flagging popularity. His management of the economy, which is struggling, gets low marks in opinion polls, and his decision to detain former President Duterte and send him to the International Criminal Court is being portrayed by the Duterte family as a national an impromptu rally in Tondo, a low-income neighbourhood in Manila's port area, Sara Duterte played an emotionally-charged video of the moment her father was taken into custody at Manila's international airport and put on a private jet to The Hague. She portrayed this as unforgivable treatment of a still popular former president. "They didn't just kidnap my dad, they stole him from us," she told the cheering crowd. Also on stage was President Marcos's elder sister Imee, who disagreed with the extradition and jumped ship to the Duterte camp – though most observers view this as a cynical move to capitalise on Duterte popular support, so she could lift her own flagging campaign to retain her senate seat. It worked. From polling low through much of the campaign, Imee Marcos managed to scrape into the "magic twelve", as they call the winning happens now is difficult to predict, but the Marcos camp certainly faces an uphill battle to get Sara Duterte impeached. Of the 24 senators, only a handful are automatically loyal to the president. The rest will have to be persuaded to go along with it, , and that won't be easy. This election has shown that the Dutertes still have very strong public support in some areas, and some in the Marcos election alliance are already on record as saying they oppose impeaching the vice-president. The same goes for the 12 senators who were not up for election this bright spot for the president could be the surprise election of senators Bam Aquino and Francis Pangilinan, both from the liberal wing of politics. Few polls had predicted their wins, which suggest a public desire for politicians outside the Marcos-Duterte feud. Neither is a friend of the Marcos clan – liberals were the main opposition to the Marcos-Duterte team in the 2022 election. But they were strongly opposed to the strongman style of former President Duterte, and may fear his pugnacious daughter becoming president in 2028. That may be enough to get them to vote for impeachment trial is expected to start in July. The Dutertes can be expected to continue chipping away at the president's battered authority in public, and both camps will be lobbying furiously behind the scenes to get senators onto their president or vice-president has ever been successfully impeached in the Philippines. Nor have any president and vice president ever fallen out so badly. It is going to be a turbulent year.

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