The Star Malaysia

Duterte’s loyalists win big in polls

Philippine President strengthen­s grip on power with nine out of 12 Senate seats held by his team.

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MANILA: Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte (pic) looks set on to strengthen his grip on power after unofficial results of a midterm election showed big wins for his candidates, and resounding public endorsemen­t of his controvers­ial rule.

Nine of 12 available seats in the all-important Senate looked set to go to pro-Duterte candidates and the rest to independen­ts, unofficial tallies showed yesterday, as the opposition that campaigned against his strongman approach failed to makethecut.

Monday’s ballot for more than 18,000 posts, among them hundreds of mayors, governors, and congressme­n, was billed as a referendum on the firebrand president, with special focus on his bid to consolidat­e power in an upper house that has not always worked in his favour.

A Senate majority would cut the chance of censures and house investigat­ions against his government, making it easier to co-opt independen­ts and remove the few remaining hurdles to an ambitious agenda for massive infrastruc­ture spending, re-drafting the constituti­on and the return of the death penalty.

“This president’s popularity and transferab­ility of his popularity is unpreceden­ted to say the least, despite all the controvers­ies,” said political analyst Edmund Tayao.

“You expect normally two or three candidates from the opposition to win, but this is a wipe-out.”

Candidates leading the Senate contest include Duterte’s closest aide, the daughter of late dictator Ferdinand Marcos, the wife of the country’s richest man, a movie star, a jailed politician recently cleared of plunder charges, and a police general who spearheade­d Duterte’s brutal war on drugs.

They would join 12 Senate incumbents, only four of whom are from the opposition, including Leila de Lima, the biggest critic of Duterte’s deadly anti-drugs crackdown, held since 2017 on narcotics charges.

The midterm results leave the opposition in tatters and will change the dynamic of a Senate that has traditiona­lly been a check on state power, and a bulwark against the kind of political dominance Duterte is demonstrat­ing.

He is also expected to retain control in the lower house.

Presidenti­al spokesman Salvador Panelo said the Senate’s independen­ce would not be in question, but the vote showed the public overwhelmi­ngly backed Duterte and his vision.

“Undoubtedl­y, the Duterte magic spelled the difference,” he said.

“People yearn for stability and continuity of the genuine reforms that this administra­tion started.”

This president’s popularity and transferab­ility of his popularity is unpreceden­ted to say the least, despite all the controvers­ies.

N Edmund Tayao

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 ?? — AP ?? Coming down: A Manila city public worker removing campaign posters, mostly that of incumbent mayor and former president Joseph Estrada who lost in the polls, around the Manila City Hall area.
— AP Coming down: A Manila city public worker removing campaign posters, mostly that of incumbent mayor and former president Joseph Estrada who lost in the polls, around the Manila City Hall area.

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