Friday, April 25, 2025
9:01 AM
Doha,Qatar
MARCOS

Marcos fighting for future in race for vice presidency

The son and namesake of late Philippine dictator Ferdinand Marcos was fighting for his political future yesterday after a cliffhanger vice presidential election contest against a novice politician.
A win for Ferdinand Marcos Jr, 58, would have been the family’s biggest political victory since its humiliating downfall in 1986 after a “People Power” uprising ended 20 years of human rights abuses, election fraud and the plunder of state coffers.
It was also widely seen as part of a long-term strategy to become president.
But the count for Monday’s vote has dragged and yesterday Marcos was 217,000 votes behind Leni Robredo, a widow thrust into politics after her well-regarded interior-minister husband died in a 2012 plane crash.
With a million votes left to count Marcos Jr has refused to concede defeat, while accusing President Benigno Aquino’s government of manipulating the results for Robredo.
“If you add up all the votes that had not been transmitted, it would show that I won by a large margin,” Marcos, an incumbent senator, said this week as his near-1mn lead early in the count evaporated.
Late Thursday he urged the state election body Commission on Elections to investigate the alleged “tampering” of a computer software that received data for the count in Manila. However the poll body rejected allegations of cheating.
Alan Cayetano, who was running third in the race, also dismissed the allegations on Thursday as he conceded victory to Robredo.
Nearly 96% of the votes have been counted. The remaining one more million have not been counted yet because of a delay in tallying those votes or because some polling booths did not operate on Monday because of violence or technical glitches. Those 2,000 precincts will re-stage their elections today.
Anti-establishment firebrand Rodrigo Duterte won the presidential vote by a landslide.
The Marcos family fled to US exile after the “People Power” revolution ended the dictator’s one-man rule, in which thousands of critics were thrown in prison. But his family has made a surprising political comeback, rebuilding its base in his northern bailiwick of Ilocos Norte province.
In Monday’s vote the dictator’s widow, Imelda Marcos, swept to a third term at the House of Representatives representing Ilocos Norte.
Her daughter, Imee Marcos, was also elected as provincial governor there for the
third time.

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