Global Times

Campaign slot for Philippine top job ends

▶ Over 65.8 million Filipinos expected to vote to elect next president

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“Filipinos are starting to unite even before the election after heeding the message of our UniTeam.”

Ferdinand Marcos Jr Philippine presidenti­al candidate

Philippine presidenti­al candidates on Saturday night wrapped up a fiesta- like campaign period of 90 days for Monday’s general election that decides the next six years of this Southeast Asian country of a 110 million population.

Over 65.8 million Filipinos are expected to troop to 37,211 polling stations on Monday to elect a new president, a new vice president, 12 senate senators, and over 300 members of the House of Representa­tives. Poll body data showed that over 18,000 national and local positions are up for grabs.

In April’s final opinion poll of registered voters, former senator Ferdinand Marcos Jr, 64, son of former president Ferdinand Marcos, led Vice President Maria Leonor Robredo, 56, and eight other candidates.

On Saturday, the last day of the campaign period, millions of Filipinos took to the streets to support their preferred presidenti­al aspirants.

Marcos’ camp claimed that up to a million attended the miting de avance of Marcos and his running mate Davao City Mayor Sara Duterte- Carpio on Saturday night in Paranaque City in the capital region. In the Philippine­s, miting de advance is traditiona­lly the final campaign event for the candidates running for local and national posts.

Marcos called for unity, saying he longs for the day when Filipinos unite to better the country. “Filipinos are starting to unite even before the election after heeding the message of our UniTeam,” he told his supporters wearing red and green, the campaign color of Marcos and Carpio, respective­ly.

Robredo’s organizers claimed nearly 800,000 came to support the incumbent vice president and her runningmat­e, Senator Francisco Pangilinan, gathering at the heart of Makati City’s central business district in a final show of force on Saturday.

“Let’s celebrate a historic campaign tonight. Let’s go! Let’s win this for the Filipino people,” Robredo told her pinkclad supporters.

Boxing icon- turned- senator Emmanuel Pacquiao, 43, ended his campaign in his downtown of General Santos City in southern Philippine­s; Manila City Mayor and former actor Francisco Domagoso, 47, in the Tondo district in Manila City; and former- national- police- chiefturne­d- senator Panfilo Lacson, 73, in his hometown of Cavite province.

For the past three months, presidenti­al aspirants crisscross­ed the archipelag­o to win the hearts and minds of voters amid the COVID- 19 pandemic. On the campaign trail, politician­s seek first to entertain voters by singing and dancing on stage and even hire popular actors to join them in the hustings.

After the crowd is entertaine­d, they also discuss how they intend to revitalize the economy amid the lingering pandemic, reduce unemployme­nt, and stamp out pervasive corruption.

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