logo
#

Latest news with #Duterte-allied

Chiz, Tito reached out to discuss Senate presidency, Bong Go confirms
Chiz, Tito reached out to discuss Senate presidency, Bong Go confirms

GMA Network

time21-05-2025

  • Politics
  • GMA Network

Chiz, Tito reached out to discuss Senate presidency, Bong Go confirms

Senate President Francis "Chiz" Escudero and senator-elect Vicente "Tito" Sotto III have separately asked Sen. Christopher Lawrence "Bong" Go for his support in their respective bids for the Senate leadership in the 20th Congress, Go told reporters on Wednesday. Go said their group which also includes Duterte-allied senators Ronald "Bato" Dela Rosa, and Robin Padilla, and senator-elect Rodante Marcoleta will vote as a bloc on the Senate presidency. 'Marami pa pong ibang nakikipag-usap din po sa amin, but we are open sa lahat po ng pag-uusap basta ang criteria namin unahin 'yung interes ng bayan, interes ng bawat Pilipino at independent Senate po ito,' Go said in an interview with reporters. (Many have been speaking with us, but we are open to all discussions. Our criteria is to prioritize the interest of the country, of every Filipino, and an independent Senate.) Asked if both Escudero and Sotto had asked for his support, Go said answered in the affirmative repeatedly. 'From our group, yes,' Go said. 'Lahat naman po sila initially nakikipag-usap individually or as a group.' (All of them are initially talking to us individually or as a group.) GMA News Online has sought comments from both Escudero and Sotto and will publish them as soon as they are available. When asked if their bloc will field someone for the Senate president race, Go said any senator had the right to run for Senate President. On Saturday, senator-elect Panfilo 'Ping' Lacson said that there are at least 13 incumbent and incoming senators of the 20th Congress who have expressed preference for a Senate president who is 'independent, transparent, and competent.' Lacson, a close political ally of Sotto, said this sentiment was based on individual discussions with majority of 20th Congress senators. Installing a new Senate president requires 13 votes from the 24-member legislative chamber. Before this, Sotto disclosed that three to four senators have approached him about his return to the Senate presidency in the 20th Congress. –NB, GMA Integrated News

Risa eyes independent bloc if Duterte allies in Senate become minority
Risa eyes independent bloc if Duterte allies in Senate become minority

GMA Network

time21-05-2025

  • Politics
  • GMA Network

Risa eyes independent bloc if Duterte allies in Senate become minority

Senator Risa Hontiveros has no plans of being in one group with senators allied with former President Rodrigo Duterte who branded themselves as the "opposition" to the Marcos administration. During the Kapihan sa Senado on Wednesday, Hontiveros said that if the Duterte-allied senators would establish themselves as the minority bloc in the 20th Congress, her "plan B" is to form an "independent bloc" with her political allies namely, senators-elect Francis "Kiko" Pangilinan and Bam Aquino. Hontiveros said she is "sure" of the probable scenario that there would be two groups that will seek to be the minority bloc in the upcoming Congress. "Wala po akong planong sumali sa isang Duterte bloc (I have no plans of joining a Duterte bloc)," she said. "Kung makukuha nila 'yung label ng minority, may option pa rin po ako or kami kung mag-decision po kami na isang independent bloc na magpapatuloy talaga sa pag-check and balance, magpapatuloy sa pag-fiscalize, at pati sa labas ng Senado, magpapatuloy sa pagbubuo ng oposisyon—, pareho sa Duterte at sa kina Presidente (Marcos)… As in everything sa pag-organize ng Senate, it's a matter of numbers," she added. (If they get the label of minority, I or we still have the option to form an independent block that will continue doing the checks and balances, continue fiscalizing, even outside of the Senates, and push forward with forming an opposition [like the senators who are allied] with Duterte, and with the President... As in everything related to organizing in the Senate, it's a matter of numbers.) According to Hontiveros, no one has talked to her about the Senate presidency yet. "They haven't talked to us as a group. They haven't talked to me individually… Wala rin text message. Pero take note, ang minority, kahit 'pag hindi kinakausap, nagsasalita," she said. (They haven't talked to us as a group. They haven't talked to me individually... No text messages at all. But take note, the minority speaks even if no one is talking to them.) Impeachment trial In the same press conference, Hontiveros vowed to maintain neutrality and objectivity in voting during the impeachment trial of Vice President Duterte. The senator made the remark despite her previous heated exchange and criticism of the Vice President's handling of her offices' confidential and intelligence funds. "Basta impeachment, neutrality of a senator-judge, judging on the basis of the evidence. Gan'un lang. Na-distill na to its essence. And that's it. That's my message to anyone, even to her," she said. (As long as it's about impeachment, it should show the neutrality of a senator-judge judging on the basis of evidence. That's all. Distilled to it essence. And that's it. That's my message to anyone, even to her.) In response to the Vice President saying she wants a "bloodbath" on her impeachment trial, Hontiveros said this term is not in her "vocabulary." "Bilang senator-judge, wala naman sa bokabularyo ko para sa impeachment 'yung ganyang salita (As a senator-judge, those words are not in my vocabulary related to impeachment). But as I said, and I am committed just to have that neutrality demanded of judges, and in particular in the case of impeachment of senator-judges," she said. "The only vocabulary that matters sa impeachment ay… 'yung neutrality and 'yung pagiging senator-judge and voting on the basis of the evidence," she pointed out. (The only vocabulary that matters during impeachment is the neutrality and the senator judge voting on the basis of evidence.) PrimeWater deal Meanwhile, Hontiveros is seeking the launch of the Senate probe into PrimeWater Infrastructure Corp.'s services in June. "Pag-resume namin sa Hunyo, inaasahan kong ma-refer siya sa proper committee. And like every other resolution, ifa-follow up ko sa chair na ma-schedule nila ng pagdinig. Kahit isang hearing lang muna ngayong patapos na 19th Congress," she said. (When we resume session in June, I trust it would be referred tot the proper committee. And like every other resolution, I will follow it up with the chair so that the hearing can be scheduled now that the 19th Conress is lemonning.) Asked if it felt awkward to investigate a corporation that is close to the Villars, Hontiveros said, "Mas awkward kung hindi kumilos ang Senate doon (It's more awkward if the Senate doesnt take action on this.)" Hontiveros clarified that it will not only be PrimeWater that will be investigated, but also the two other water concessionaires over the problems in their services. PrimeWater is owned by the Villar family. There are two Villars in the current Congress, namely Senator Mark Villar and her mother, outgoing Senator Cynthia Villar. Senator-elect Camille Villar will replace her mother Cynthia, and she will join her brother Mark in the 20th Congress. — VDV, GMA Integrated News

Philippines Election Results 2025: Dutertes Assert Influence
Philippines Election Results 2025: Dutertes Assert Influence

Yahoo

time13-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Philippines Election Results 2025: Dutertes Assert Influence

Filipinos cast their votes for the Philippine midterm elections in Antipolo City on May 12, 2025. Credit - Ryan Eduard Benaid—NurPhoto/Getty Images The Philippines' 2025 midterm election could have marked a moment of reckoning for the decades-old populist Duterte dynasty. Its patriarch, 80-year-old former President Rodrigo, had been arrested by the International Criminal Court in March for alleged crimes against humanity. His daughter and practical successor, current Vice President Sara Duterte-Carpio, was impeached by the House in February on charges including corruption and threatening to kill political rival President Ferdinand 'Bongbong' Marcos Jr. and faces a trial before the Senate later this year. Instead, however, the election, in which tens of millions of Filipinos braved extreme heat to vote Monday for some 18,000 national and local offices across the archipelago, marked a resurgence for the Dutertes, according to preliminary results. Rodrigo himself and his youngest son Sebastian were elected mayor and vice mayor of Davao City, where Rodrigo previously served as mayor for more than 22 years before becoming President in 2016 and where the family has long held power. Given that Rodrigo remains in detention in The Hague, Sebastian is expected to discharge the duties of the office. In the Senate, where Sara's fate will be decided, key Duterte allies resoundingly won re-election, including Christopher Go, Rodrigo's former aide, who was the most-voted-for senator, and Ronald dela Rosa, the former national police chief at the height of Rodrigo's deadly drug war, who ranked third in the overall vote tally. The two, who also face potential arrest by the ICC, staunchly defended the drug war during their first terms in the Senate. Another Duterte-allied lawmaker from the lower legislative chamber, Rep. Rodante Marcoleta, snagged a Senate seat. Marcoleta previously said that he would defend Sara against impeachment. While some opponents had hoped that an electoral defeat for the Dutertes, following the other blows they'd already faced in the run-up to the vote, might once and for all push the family out of relevance, the Dutertes have instead appeared to reassert their unprecedented influence, experts say. 'You're talking about a President who was more popular when he stepped out of office than when he assumed office,' says Aries Arugay, who chairs the department of political science at the University of the Philippines. Rodrigo's drug war, like similar ones in Colombia, Mexico, and Thailand, may have earned international criticism, but it also similarly won a significant amount of domestic support, says Arugay, 'because of their visuality and their ability to sow fear, which is often a proxy for effectiveness.' Emily Soriano's family did not believe it at first when they heard of Rodrigo Duterte's shocking arrest on March 11. Like many other families in the Philippines, hers had held off on their sighs of relief until Duterte was flown to the Netherlands later that evening to face charges related to his brutal anti-drug campaign that human rights groups say killed more than 30,000 people. Soriano's son, who was 15, was among seven people killed in Caloocan, Metro Manila, in December 2016, as part of that campaign. 'Since 2017 up until today, we've long called for an end to the killings, and for Duterte and the policemen to be held to account,' Soriano tells TIME tearily. 'That call hasn't gone to waste,' she added. Indeed, Rodrigo's arrest was no certainty. For years, he and his allies had fought the ICC to avoid accountability. But as the Dutertes' rivalry with the powerful Marcoses, who have their own despotic family history, intensified—Rodrigo and Marcos Jr. have traded criticisms over foreign and domestic policy as well as accusations of drug use, and Sara has stepped up her interest in succeeding Marcos Jr. in the 2028 presidential election—the government led by the Marcoses and their allies proved less willing to protect the controversial Duterte family that it had once entered into a delicate alliance with to win the presidency in 2022. But while Soriano waits for Rodrigo's ultimate fate to be decided before the ICC, she admits that back home the specter of a Duterte return to power looms. While some observers previously suggested that Rodrigo's arrest could mark the beginning of the end for the dynasty, the midterm election results appear to show otherwise. 'This is not the end,' Sara Duterte-Carpio said in a statement after the election. 'It's a renewed beginning.' The Vice President framed her family's and their allies' showing in the polls as the start of an opposition movement against the Marcos-led government. 'We will continue to hold the government accountable, advocate for the issues that matter, and work tirelessly to serve as a strong and constructive opposition,' she said. For Marcos, the final years of his presidency will now likely be marked by further division and challenges. Once extremely popular, he has seen his approval ratings plummet partly due to his Administration's performance on addressing domestic issues, such as rising costs of living and concerns about corruption, but also in large part because of the rival dynastic feud. The Dutertes and their allies have claimed that Sara's impeachment and Rodrigo's arrest were politically motivated and used both to consolidate support, especially in the southern part of the Philippines, a historic Duterte stronghold. Sara's public ratings went up after her father's arrest, while senatorial candidates allied with the Dutertes like Go and Dela Rosa also saw boosts in opinion polls. The Dutertes' supporters 'were not that noisy prior to the arrest,' says Arugay. Richard Heydarian, a Manila-based political analyst who lectures at the University of the Philippines, says the boost could also be in part attributed to disinformation campaigns. Reuters reported in April that a network of social media accounts sprang up in the wake of Rodrigo's arrest, coordinating praise of the Dutertes and attacks on the ICC and Marcoses. Israel-based Cyabra, the tech firm that discovered the network, told Reuters the disinformation campaigns 'shaped the conversation' in the lead-up to the elections. Still, neither the Dutertes nor the Marcoses have an easy path ahead. While the next electoral competition will be for the presidency in 2028, the most immediate battleground will be in the Senate, which will reconvene in June. And despite key electoral victories for the Dutertes—including Marcos Jr.'s own sister Imee, who broke with her family to back the Dutertes and also appears on track to win a Senate seat—Marcos allies appear to have retained six of the 12 seats up for election in the 24-member chamber. Public opinion polls consistently show that Sara is most Filipinos' preferred candidate to succeed Marcos come 2028, but an impeachment conviction, which requires a two-thirds majority vote, would bar her from public office for good under local law. For people like Soriano, however, the elections are about more than political stratagem and determining which family holds the most nominal power. It's about how they will wield it. In office, Duterte's lieutenants, she fears, 'are likely to continue what Duterte left behind.' Contact us at letters@

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store