The Columbus Dispatch

Philippine leader Duterte announces retirement

- Jim Gomez and Joeal Calupitan

MANILA, Philippine­s – Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte on Saturday announced he was retiring from politics and dropping plans to run for vice president in next year’s elections when his term ends, paving the way for his politician daughter to make a possible bid for the top post.

Speaking before reporters, Duterte said many Filipinos have expressed their opposition to his vice-presidenti­al bid in surveys and public forums.

“The overwhelmi­ng sentiment of the Filipino is that I’m not qualified, and it would be a violation of the constituti­on,” Duterte said. “In obedience to the will of the people.”

“I will follow what you wish and today I announce my retirement from politics,” he added.

The 76-year-old leader, known for his deadly anti-drugs crackdown, brash rhetoric and unorthodox political style, earlier accepted the ruling party’s nomination for him to seek the vice presidency in the May 9 elections. The decision outraged many of his opponents, who have described him as a human rights calamity in an Asian bastion of democracy.

Duterte announced his surprise withdrawal from the election after accompanyi­ng his former longtime aide, Sen. Bong Go, to register his own vice presidenti­al candidacy with the ruling party at a Commission on Elections center. Philippine presidents are limited by the constituti­on to a single six-year term and opponents had said they would question the legality of Duterte’s announced vice presidenti­al run before the Supreme Court if he pursues his bid.

While two past presidents have run for lower elected positions and won after their terms ended in recent history, Duterte was the first to consider running for the vice presidency. If he pursued the candidacy and won, that could elevate him back to the presidency if the elected leader dies or is incapacita­ted for any reason.

Duterte’s withdrawal could pave the

way for the possible presidenti­al run of his daughter Sara Duterte, who is currently the mayor of southern Davao city. She has been prodded by many supporters to make a bid to succeed her father and has topped independen­t public opinion surveys on who should lead the country next.

But after her father initially declared that he would seek the vice presidency, Sara Duterte announced she would not run for president, saying she and her father have agreed that only one Duterte would run for a national office next year.

Shortly after Duterte announced that he was backing out from the vicepresid­ential run, his daughter filed her papers for re-election in Davao city although speculatio­n remains rife that she would withdraw from her mayoral re-election bid and run for the presidency.

President Duterte took office in 2016 and immediatel­y launched a crackdown on illegal drugs that has left more than 6,000 mostly petty suspects dead and alarmed Western government­s and human rights groups. The Internatio­nal Criminal Court has launched an investigat­ion of the killings but he has vowed never to cooperate with the inquiry and allow ICC investigat­ors to enter the country.

 ?? LISA MARIE DAVID/AP ?? Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, left, raises the hand of Sen. Bong Go, who filed his certificate of candidacy for vice-president.
LISA MARIE DAVID/AP Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, left, raises the hand of Sen. Bong Go, who filed his certificate of candidacy for vice-president.

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