Hartford Courant

Young voters reject landslide Marcos Jr. win in Philippine­s

- By Sui-lee Wee

MANILA, Philippine­s — Angry young voters gathered in the Philippine­s on Tuesday to protest against Ferdinand Marcos Jr., the son and namesake of the former dictator, who clinched a landslide victory this week in one of the most divisive presidenti­al elections in the country’s recent history.

Multiple election observers said they had received thousands of reports of election-related anomalies since the vote Monday. Malfunctio­ning voting machines were one of the biggest concerns, with Votereport­ph, an election watchdog, saying the breakdowns had “severely impaired this electoral process.”

On Tuesday, Leni Robredo, Marcos’ closest rival in the race and the country’s current vice president, said her team was looking into reports of voter fraud. But every opinion poll before the election had predicted that Marcos would win by a huge margin, and his lead by Tuesday was so overwhelmi­ng that reports of fraud and malfunctio­ning machines were unlikely to sway the result.

Marcos had racked up nearly 31 million votes, according to a preliminar­y tally. That was more than double the number of votes Robredo had, giving Marcos the biggest margin of victory in more than three decades. Voter turnout was around 80%, an election official said Tuesday.

During his campaign, Marcos appealed to a public disillusio­ned with democracy in the Philippine­s, a country of 110 million and the oldest democracy in Southeast Asia. Yet for many Filipinos, the Marcos family name remains a byword for excess and greed, and a painful reminder of the atrocities committed by the father.

Marcos’ 92-year-old mother, Imelda Marcos, was sentenced to up to 11 years in 2018 for creating private foundation­s to hide her unexplaine­d wealth, but remains free. She posted bail, and her case is under appeal by the Supreme Court.

Critics fear the younger Marcos could use the presidency to scrap that case and other outstandin­g cases against the family.

Dozens of mostly young voters gathered in a park across from the elections commission building Tuesday to protest the election results and Marcos, chanting, “Thief, thief, thief!” and “Put Imelda in jail.”

Police stood watch over the demonstrat­ions.

Paula Santos, a doctor in training, confronted the officers. “Personally, I am scared,” she told them. “I am turning 27 and I am scared for our future, especially now that I’m an adult. When I was young, I did not care about politics. But now I am having goose bumps because of fear.”

In the months leading up to the election, hundreds of thousands of Robredo’s young supporters had campaigned door to door, seeking to fight an online disinforma­tion campaign that portrayed the violent Marcos regime as a “golden age” in the country’s history.

Robredo has stopped short of formally conceding the race.

On Tuesday, she told her supporters to accept “whatever the final result will be.”

 ?? JES AZNAR/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Protesters rally Tuesday in Manila against Ferdinand Marcos Jr. amid reports of election fraud after his landslide victory for president in the Philippine­s.
JES AZNAR/THE NEW YORK TIMES Protesters rally Tuesday in Manila against Ferdinand Marcos Jr. amid reports of election fraud after his landslide victory for president in the Philippine­s.

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