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Commentary: Philippines politics is often mad. It just got crazier

The political marriage of convenience between the Marcos and Duterte clans was never going to last. But Manila cannot afford to be distracted by the latest round of clan rivalry and violent threats, says Ruth Pollard for Bloomberg Opinion.

Commentary: Philippines politics is often mad. It just got crazier

Composite photo of Philippines President Ferdinand Marcos Jr (left) and Vice President Sara Duterte. (Photos: Reuters/Athit Perawongmetha, Reuters/Lisa Marie David)

TOKYO: Political violence is nothing new in the Philippines. It was, after all, the site of the world’s worst massacre of media workers when 58 people, including 32 journalists, were murdered in 2009 while traveling in an election convoy on the southern island of Mindanao.

The powerful Ampatuan clan had pre-dug a vast grave in preparation for the cars carrying relatives of their rival, Esmael Mangudadatu, to arrive at a police checkpoint. Heavily armed gunmen intercepted the motorcade, killing then burying them all. I was on Mindanao soon after as part of a team of press freedom groups including the Committee to Protect Journalists and the International Federation of Journalists that examined the killings: It was a chilling scene. There’s been a steady stream of local assassinations and kidnappings ever since, and plenty beforehand, too. 

So when Vice President Sara Duterte – daughter of former president Rodrigo Duterte – released a bizarre video on Nov 23, telling President Ferdinand Marcos Jr she would have him assassinated if someone did the same to her, many rolled their eyes and prepared for another round of hostilities. The influential media site Rappler was first to draw the similarities: Sara Duterte Unleashes The Ampatuan Within, its headline read, noting her video was released on the 15th anniversary of the massacre.

Duterte announced her resignation from Marcos’ Cabinet in June, while remaining vice president, highlighting the extent of the fallout between the two families. Since then, she’s been escalating her criticisms of the president, threatening to exhume his father’s remains and throw them in the sea, and saying that she imagined beheading him.

Duterte also alleged, as others have before her, that the Marcos family plotted the assassination of former senator Benigno Aquino – a member of another large political dynasty – in 1983.

For his part, Marcos has tightened his security and said: “Such criminal attempts should not be ignored,” while the Philippines’ National Bureau of Investigation issued a subpoena to Duterte. After all, she may have downplayed her remarks, but it is hard to ignore her repeated thoughts of violence about the president. A government panel postponed its Friday (Nov 29) hearing into allegations Duterte misused public funds, claims she has denied, to allow her to answer the subpoena instead.

DYNASTIC FEUD AND INSTABILITY AT THE WORST TIME

So what happens now? The nation’s mid-term elections are due in 2025 and Duterte Sr has filed his candidacy for mayor of Davao on the island of Mindanao – a position that he has held before, and one the clan has controlled for three decades. His two sons are also planning to run for the Senate.

Of course Marcos himself is in the family business: He is the son of former dictator Ferdinand Marcos, known for his rampant corruption and deadly political repression, while his sister Imee is a senator, his son is a congressman, and his cousin is house speaker. 

It’s dynastic politics run wild, and unless it’s contained, this feud will set the Philippines on another course of instability at the worst possible time – it is dealing with daily threats from China in the South China Sea and facing the uncertainty that comes with president-elect Donald Trump in the White House.

The political marriage of convenience between the rival clans forged during the 2022 elections that brought Marcos Jr to power was never going to last.

Things deteriorated quickly when the House of Representatives began hearings in August to examine Duterte Sr’s deadly drug war, along with his daughter’s actions as head of the Department of Education. There are other pressures, too: The International Criminal Court (ICC) is also investigating Duterte Sr’s campaign of extrajudicial killings during his term as president from 2016 to 2022 that left more than 6,000 dead. Human rights groups like Amnesty International say the toll could be as high as 30,000. 

Although Marcos Jr has said he doesn’t support an outside investigation, it no doubt sent a chill through the Duterte clan when his executive secretary announced that if ICC refers the process to Interpol and requests the Philippines’ help, it would receive full cooperation.

PUSHING BACK AGAINST CHINA

All this domestic drama will be troubling the Philippines’ allies and partners – particularly the United States, Japan and Australia – which have been steadfast in their support for Marcos Jr’s policy of pushing back against China’s hostile actions in the South China Sea, where more than US$3 trillion in goods pass through every year.

When he took office, Marcos Jr steered the nation away from his predecessor’s soft approach to Beijing, granting the US military access to more bases, increasing naval missions in the disputed waterway, and widely publicising violent attacks on its vessels by the Chinese Coast Guard. 

Earlier this month, the president signed two laws to strengthen the Philippines’ maritime claims, including one that creates a system for foreign vessels and aircraft to exercise the right of passage through its waters and airspace. Beijing, which lays claim to most of the South China Sea, strongly condemned the move.

Manila cannot afford to be distracted by this latest round of clan rivalry and violence threats. Trump has appointed two China hawks in key roles in his new cabinet: Senator Marco Rubio is in line for secretary of state, while Mike Waltz is tipped to be national security advisor.

That means US and China relations are set for another rocky period, and one where its treaty allies like the Philippines will be expected to continue with their own tough stance against Beijing. 

Marcos Jr has managed the drama well so far, but he needs to get his house in order. As jaw-droppingly unhinged as Philippine politics can be, there are larger issues at stake – and powerful allies to keep happy. 

Source: Bloomberg/ch

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