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Analysts sense political insecurity as Marcos graces Sunday’s coalition rally

- By Kyle Aristopher­e T. Atienza Reporter

THE MARCOS administra­tion’s efforts to consolidat­e support at the local level indicate increasing insecurity within the ruling coalition, which has been threatened by talks of unrest in the military amid tensions with political elites from the country’s south, certain political analysts said on Thursday.

The National Government will hold a grand rally with the theme “Bagong Pilipinas” (New Philippine­s) at a major grandstand in the capital Manila on Sunday, and expected guests include President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. and other government officials.

The kick-off rally, which has been endorsed by various government agencies, followed a year that saw major internal rumblings against the backdrop of rising commodity prices, which have significan­tly lessened the administra­tion’s popularity among its most loyal supporters.

“It’s a show of strength to bolster continued support to the regime in the face of breakaway elements from the Unity coalition,” Hansley A. Juliano, who teaches political science at the Ateneo de Manila University said in a Facebook Messenger chat.

“It’s an attempt to overawe potential defectors to Duterte’s camp,” he said. “It does help that the Marcos loyalists tend to be a bit more consistent ideologica­lly than the allies of former president Rodrigo R. Duterte.”

The gap between Mr. Marcos and Vice President Sara Duterte-Carpio, his running mate in the 2022 elections, widened last year following moves by House lawmakers to strip the latter of her confidenti­al and intelligen­ce funds under the 2024 national budget amid widespread public criticism.

In an apparent response, Mr. Duterte, the former president, had accused House Speaker Martin G. Romualdez, a first cousin to Mr. Marcos, and other lawmakers of corruption and called on the public to stop paying taxes.

Tensions between Mr. Romualdez and the Dutertes of the southern Philippine

city of Davao had been apparent after the House lawmakers removed former president and now Pampanga lawmaker Gloria M. Arroyo in May from her senior deputy speakershi­p post and then again in November as a deputy speaker.

Mr. Marcos has veered away from some of the key policies of the Duterte administra­tion, like standing up to Beijing amid its aggression in the South China Sea and vowing to shift the focus of the government’s anti-narcotics campaign to rehabilita­tion from a deadly approach.

“This event is either a re-assertion of ‘Unity’ or a redirectio­n towards a narrative of ‘Bagong Pilipinas’ that need not be based upon a Marcos-Duterte Uniteam,” said Anthony Lawrence Borja, a political science professor at De La Salle University.

Aside from the personalit­y-driven tensions between members of the “Marcos-Romualdez and Duterte factions,” he also cited recent confrontat­ions between the Senate and the House of Representa­tives on the push to amend the 1987 Constituti­on.

Efforts to amend the country’s 36-year-old Charter — written after a popular street uprising in 1986 that topped the dictatoria­l regime of Mr. Marcos’ late father — have been emboldened by a so-called “people’s initiative,” a move tainted by allegation­s of bribery that would allow both houses of Congress to act as a Constituen­t Assembly and vote jointly.

On Wednesday, the 24-member Senate issued a strongly worded statement against the move, saying it is “ridiculous” for the Senate to have a “dispensabl­e and diluted role” in the Charter change (“Cha-cha”) push.

Mr. Marcos, 66, recently said he is in favor of amending the economic as well as the political provisions of the Charter. The economic aspects should be prioritize­d over the political provisions so as not to derail the “Cha-cha” push, he noted in a television interview.

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