Speaking to the Foreign Correspondents Association of the Philippines, the president said: “The one I have the most contact with is [Vice-President Sara Duterte] – and how we were during the election, [and since then] it hasn’t really changed.”
The Marcos and Duterte families became allies in 2022 when Sara, the daughter of ex-president Duterte, joined Marcos’ campaign in what proved to be a winning combination for both candidates.
Since then, the bond between the two clans has become increasingly fractious – with plenty of invective being hurled at the Marcos family by the former president and his supporters.
“Our constitution says the AFP [Armed Forces of the Philippines] shall protect the people and the state, not the president. If we allow the war to explode in the West Philippine Sea, there will be countless dead bodies and unimaginable destruction. Before that happens …. I call on the Armed Forces of the Philippines to please withdraw your support to the chief executive …. [so he’ll step down],” Alvarez said at a prayer rally in Tagum City in the Mindanao province of Davao del Norte on Sunday.
The Philippine military said on Tuesday that it plans to ask Alvarez to explain his comments. The Department of Defence said it supports Marcos Jnr’s constitutional powers, adding calls for withdrawals of support might result in a “criminal investigation”.
“They call it a gentleman’s agreement, I call it a secret agreement”, he told reporters in Washington.
In the foreign correspondents’ forum on Tuesday, Marcos Jnr said in comments directed at Duterte: “We still have to find out what this is all about. I tried to ask officials of the former administration [but] I haven’t got a straight answer … What is contained in that agreement and what did we agree to? Why do you keep it secret?”
He had not been able to get answers about the agreement because of “many excuses”, the Philippine president said.
Franco, the political analyst, said she could not foresee any type of reconciliation between Marcos Jnr, Duterte and their families. “I think there is already so much distrust, so it is difficult to patch things up,” she said.
Nuelle Duterte, the former president’s niece who has long been a critic of her uncle’s administration, told This Week in Asia that even during the 2022 campaign, she “didn’t think this unity would last, mostly because people hungry for absolute power never really work well together. One side has to win.”
The New Zealand-based psychiatrist said the two families had to enter the alliance in 2022 because they would have lost the election otherwise.
“It was a strategic alliance, nothing more. Will it last? Likely no, because neither party wants to be the subordinate of the other.”
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