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This is AI generated summarization, which may have errors. For context, always refer to the full article.
‘This impeachment…is novel for one reason: It was filed in an election season.’
Between a Sara Duterte talking about exes in reaction to her impeachment to a Bato dela Rosa shaming an Akbayan party-list candidate who’s a stroke survivor, you’ve got every reason to tune out these days.
Add to this the hemming and hawing of Senate President Chiz Escudero on how to handle the impeachment complaint that’s already been transmitted to the upper chamber, and President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.’s poor articulation of his supposed distance from the moves against his vice president.
“Wala akong pakialam diyan,” he blurted, sounding almost pissed. Ilocos Norte Representative Sandro Marcos outclassed his father when asked why he was the first signatory in the complaint: Well, if someone had threatened to assassinate your parents and throw the remains of your lolo out into the sea, wouldn’t you do the same, he asked.
Constitutional lawyer John Molo argues in this piece that whatever motives are behind the impeachment, “there’s no better justice than enforcing the clear terms of the Constitution now.”
This impeachment, compared to the last one that convicted a chief justice, is novel for one reason: It was filed in an election season.
The senatorial and party list campaigns kick off on Tuesday, February 11. As Rappler reporters Bea Cupin and Bonz Magsambol write in this scene-setter, the polls “are as much a referendum on Marcos’ promise of a ‘Bagong Pilipinas’ as it is a gauge of the power of the Duterte name.” (President Marcos will campaign on Tuesday with his administration’s bets in Laoag City in his home province of Ilocos Norte. Check the final list of senatorial bets here.)
While then-president Joseph Estrada was also impeached months before the 2001 midterm races, the streets were already on fire over exposés against his corruption, that only a few doubted he’d last long enough to campaign for his candidates.
Some food for thought, though:
Beyond our latest impeachment season, America continued to rattle the world with President Donald Trump’s orders, in particular the freeze on funding for USAID, and its decapitation as an independent institution that helps the poorest communities worldwide. Elon Musk and his platform are leading the charge against USAID, spreading false claims that were amplified by right-wing online networks — and Trump himself.
What comes after the USAID shutdown? The Brookings Institute wrote: “USAID’s efforts to prevent conflict around the world, encourage democratic and pluralistic processes and protect human rights, reduce suffering from death and disease, encourage sustainable economic growth, and prevent environmental destruction reflect the essence of the United States. They help build an international environment that services US interests and values.” Read more about the implications of Trump’s decision here.
Trump has also signed an order to cut financial assistance to South Africa. Why? Read the story here.
Here are some of Rappler’s bests that you shouldn’t miss:
Here’s to a week of discernment.
[In This Economy] The manufactured crisis that is Marcos’ ‘food security emergency’
Is the food crisis for real?
– Rappler.com
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