An Electoral Mail slip from the Philippines

Outgoing authoritarian president Rodrigo Duterte leaves behind a country much damaged by his time in office

Tom Smith

7 min read

The upcoming election in the Philippines presents the country with a stark choice to set its political course for the next six years. Outgoing authoritarian president  leaves behind a country much damaged by his time in office.

, a brutal 鈥渨ar on drugs鈥 鈥 for which he faces an International Criminal Court  鈥 and  have set a low bar for his successor.

This is all handy for the frontrunner for the 9 May poll 鈥 , the son of former dictator  (1965鈥86). Bongbong leads the polls by a considerable margin and has done so for months. This is despite a rather contemptuous attitude towards the electorate in his campaign. He has , not shown up to debates with  and even avoided contact with the public after a bizarre incident claiming an injury but having the .

Bongbong is relying on two forces to carry him to the presidential palace, neither of which are new or of his doing, but the old ways may well be enough for him.

The first is a political system still based on patronage. Presidents and vice-presidents are elected on separate ballots but every candidate sits among a pyramid of others running for positions in the political hierarchy, from senators, governors and mayors all the way down to the most local of representatives 鈥 the . There are over 42 thousand barangays (small administrative districts) in the Philippines, and most captains will negotiate support for a presidential candidate and bring the votes of their village with them.

The second is the Marcos family brand and its amazing ability to outlast decades of scandals. Their alliances among the elite and other clans run deep in the Philippines. Bongbong鈥檚 notable endorsement has come from a rogue鈥檚 gallery of former presidents. Former film actor Joseph Estrada, president from 1998鈥2001, was forced to resign following corruption and impeachment charges.  (president from 2001鈥2010) who would go on to , had her prosecution for plundering 369 million pesos (拢5.6 million) dropped under the Duterte鈥檚 administration. As part of her political rehabilitation, she spearheaded his administration鈥檚 attempts to lower the age of . Yes 鈥 nine years of age.

The only campaign issue Bongbong seems interested in is defending those under investigation for charges of stealing Philippine pesos 183 million (拢2.8 million) 鈥 notably Estrada鈥檚 . The legacy of covering for the last crony looks to be the playbook here with Sara Duterte allied to Bongbong in her quest to become vice-president to continue her father鈥檚  and protect him from any  for his time in office.

Marcos and friends get away with this through concerted efforts to police online criticism and are effective in . They also rely on the tried and tested method of vote-buying. A practice  in his own midterm elections.

The only realistic alternative to business as usual comes in the form of Leni Robredo, who is a distant second in the polls. She is the sitting vice-president and a liberal thorn in Duterte鈥檚 side, though vice-presidents wield little power. Robredo鈥檚 campaign has seen  at rallies across the country and suggests  and momentum can be mobilised.

Robredo has found support from prominent , many conscious that the media  could continue under Marcos. Similarly, Robredo has found  and this may circumvent some of the traditional dynastic power structures in the Philippines.

Robredo has a mountain to climb 鈥 according to the polls 鈥 which are  in the Philippines. Overturning decades of institutional and cultural political practice on 9 May would be a truly massive achievement. Not least because the final days of election campaigns of often the most violent.

Election violence in the Philippines is a perennial problem. My research, published in the journal , shows the phenomenon is getting worse. Government measures, including a gun ban and the use of police checkpoints, have not been successful.

On Monday the Philippine National Police had acknowledged 52 reported incidents of . Hotspots across the nation have been  that will be heavily policed, not least , the country鈥檚 second-largest city. The threat of election-related violence is most pronounced for candidates, campaigners and journalists.

On 19 April, presidential candidate Leody de Guzman was  in an apparent assassination attempt. The spectre of violence over the final weekend of campaigning and as the results are confirmed is very real. In 2009, 58 people, including 32 journalists covering an electoral event, were butchered and  when their convoy was attacked by the local Ampatuan clan in Maguindanao, part of the autonomous region of Mindanao.

It is this sort of recent past, along with those who still bear the scars of Ferdinand Marcos鈥檚 years of torture (estimated  and  as 3,257 killed, tortured 35,000 and imprisoned 70,000), that means the wrong electoral choice could have very serious consequences for the remaining Filipino democratic institutions.


Dr Tom Smith is a Principal Lecturer at Portsmouth Business School in the Faculty of Business and Law.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons Licence. .

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