Toronto Star

Dictator’s son eyes presidency

- JIM GOMEZ AND AARON FAVILA

Philippine vice-president and opposition leader Leni Robredo registered her presidenti­al candidacy Thursday for next year’s elections in a move that would bring the pro-democracy advocate to a new faceoff with the son of the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos who is also seeking the top post.

Robredo joined a growing list of aspirants for the May 9 elections after talks failed for key candidates to unite behind a single contender who would go against whoever President Rodrigo Duterte and his ruling party endorse for the race.

Robredo earlier said she may decide to run if exsenator Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr., whom she narrowly defeated in the 2016 vice-presidenti­al race, sought the presidency. He filed the papers on Wednesday, leading some on social media to depict the new rivalry as a boxing rematch.

Philippine presidents and vice-presidents are elected separately, and Robredo and Duterte have had strained ties for years. She has attacked his brutal crackdown on illegal drugs that has left thousands of mostly poor suspects dead, and led to the Internatio­nal Criminal Court opening an investigat­ion.

She has also hit Marcos Jr.’s refusal to apologize and express remorse over the thousands of human rights victims under his father’s iron-fist rule from 1972 to 1981. A lawyer, former legislator and social activist who advocates democracy, human rights and good governance, Robredo backed the 1986 “people power” protests that culminated in the ouster of Marcos and became a harbinger of change in authoritar­ian regimes.

Robredo, 56, is the latest key politician to declare their intention to succeed Duterte, whose six-year term, one of the most tumultuous and controvers­ial in recent Philippine history, ends in June next year.

The ailing leader, known for his brash rhetoric and expletive-laden outbursts, initially planned to run for the vice-presidency under the PDP-Laban party that he leads but backed out Saturday after his popularity rating dropped and prompted him to announce his retirement from politics.

The candidacy of Marcos Jr. immediatel­y sparked a protest by more than 100 left-wing activists who vowed to campaign against him as they burned effigies of his father and Duterte, an ally of the Marcoses.

Marcos Jr. said Wednesday he was ready to face Robredo and the other contenders.

The elder Marcos died in exile in Hawaii three years after his ouster without admitting any wrongdoing, including accusation­s that he and his family amassed an estimated $5 billion to $10 billion while he was in power.

 ?? ROUELLE UMALI POOL PHOTO VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ferdinand Marcos Jr. poses after filing his certificat­e of candidacy for next year’s presidenti­al elections.
ROUELLE UMALI POOL PHOTO VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ferdinand Marcos Jr. poses after filing his certificat­e of candidacy for next year’s presidenti­al elections.

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