Business World

Liberal Party to work with Marcos gov’t on worthy projects — spokespers­on

- Kyle Aristopher­e T. Atienza

A PHILIPPINE opposition party on Thursday said it is willing to work with the government of President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. on key programs if it means holding his predecesso­r to account.

Liberal Party spokespers­on ex-Senator Leila M. de Lima said the Marcos government provided a “breathing room” after former President Rodrigo R. Duterte’s war on drugs killed thousands of mostly poor suspects.

“There’s nothing that will prevent us [from working with the administra­tion] if there are worthy initiative­s from the BBM (Bongbong Marcos) administra­tion, especially in terms of good governance,” she told a forum.

Ms. De Lima said the Marcos government has been tolerant of opposing voices and has “brought the rent-seeking order back to its favorite normal and stable character, where everyone in the system gets a chance to partake of government largesse.”

A return of the tough-talking leader to power would be a “nightmare” for the country, she said, noting that 2016 “was a wake-up call to the steady regression of our political system into a political monopoly.”

Ms. De Lima said the Liberal Party would assume a “fiscalizin­g” role under the Marcos administra­tion.

“We are still part of the opposition coalition, but it doesn’t mean that our party will not sit down with the BBM administra­tion in certain initiative­s that would be attuned to our ideals.”

The party, which suffered major losses in previous elections, will begin its preparatio­ns for the 2025 midterm elections next week, she said.

Candidates in the senatorial, congressio­nal and local elections will start filing their certificat­es of candidacy in October.

Ms. De Lima separately told BusinessWo­rld by phone that former Senators Francis “Kiko” N. Pangilinan and Paolo Benigno “Bam” A. Aquino IV are eyeing a Senate return as opposition candidates.

Human rights lawyer Jose Manuel “Chel” I. Diokno may also seek a Senate seat, she added.

Mr. Pangilinan and Mr. Diokno ran for vice president and senator, respective­ly, in 2022 but lost. Mr. Aquino, the cousin of the late President Benigno S.C. Aquino III, failed in his reelection bid in 2019.

Ms. De lima said ex-Vice-President Maria Leonor G. Robredo, who lost to Mr. Marcos in 2022, is still being convinced by her party mates to run for senator.

Mr. Marcos, 66, has shunned key policies of his predecesso­r by standing up to China and pursuing closer ties with the US and other western allies.

Mr. Marcos and Mr. Duterte earlier this month traded accusation­s over drug use, after the firebrand leader attacked him at a political rally in Davao City that was highly critical of the push to amend the 1987 Constituti­on.

Ms. De Lima said the former president is afraid of losing his political capital amid an Internatio­nal Criminal Court investigat­ion of his deadly war on drugs. His daughter Vice-President Sara Duterte-Carpio is Mr. Marcos’sEducation secretary.

Mr. Duterte has bared a plan to separate the southern island of Mindanao from the rest of the nation, an idea that has been criticized by government agencies and lawmakers from Mindanao.

Amid the widening rift within the ruling coalition, “the people grow more impatient for an alternativ­e,” Ms. De Lima said. —

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