Deccan Chronicle

Marcos Jr is Filipino Prez, protests follow

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Manila, May 10: The Philippine­s woke to a new but familiar political landscape on Tuesday, after an election triumph by Ferdinand Marcos Jr. paved the way for a once unimaginab­le return to the country’s highest office for its most notorious political dynasty.

Marcos, better known as “Bongbong”, trounced bitter rival Leni Robredo to become the first candidate in recent history to win an outright majority in a Philippine­s presidenti­al election, marking a stunning comeback by the son and namesake of an ousted dictator that has been decades in the making.

Marcos fled into exile in Hawaii with his family during a 1986 “people power” uprising that ended his father’s autocratic

20-year rule, and has served in congress and the senate since his return to the Philippine­s in 1991.

Marcos’s runaway victory in Monday’s election now looks certain with 98 per cent of the eligible ballots counted in an unofficial tally showing he has

31 million votes, double that of Robredo.

An official result is expected around the end of the month.

“There are thousands of you out there, volunteers, parallel groups, political leaders that have cast their lot with us because of our belief in our message

of unity,” Marcos said in a statement streamed on Facebook, while standing beside the Philippine flag.

Though Marcos, 64, campaigned on a platform of unity, political analysts say his presidency is unlikely to foster that, despite the margin of victory.

Philippine markets were mixed after the vote. Stocks (.PSI) lost as much as three per cent at one point, sovereign dollar bonds fell, while the peso currency rose 0.4 per cent against the dollar.

Many who did not support Marcos are angered by what they see as a brazen attempt by the disgraced former first family to use its mastery of social media to reinvent historical narratives of its time in power.

Thousands of opponents of the senior Marcos suffered persecutio­n during

a brutal 1972-1981 era of martial law, and the family name became synonymous with plunder, cronyism and extravagan­t living, with billions of dollars of state wealth disappeari­ng.

The Marcos family has denied wrongdoing and many of its supporters, bloggers and social media influencer­s say historical accounts are distorted.

Around 400 people, mostly students, staged a protest against Marcos outside the election commission on Tuesday, citing election irregulari­ties.

The poll body on Tuesday upheld its dismissals of complaints filed by different groups, including victims of martial law, that had sought to disbar Marcos from the presidenti­al race based on a 1995 tax evasion conviction.

 ?? AFP ?? People display placards during a rally in front of the commission on elections in Manila on Tuesday, to protest results of Monday’s presidenti­al election. —
AFP People display placards during a rally in front of the commission on elections in Manila on Tuesday, to protest results of Monday’s presidenti­al election. —

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