The impeachment trial of Philippine Vice President Sara Duterte has commenced in Manila, in a highly charged case that could determine her political future.
Thousands of police were deployed around the Senate in the capital on Monday as protesters calling for Duterte’s conviction began gathering outside. The vice president’s office said she would not appear in person.
The House of Representatives impeached the daughter of former President Rodrigo Duterte on allegations of corruption, bribery and an assassination plot against one-time ally President Ferdinand Marcos. Duterte denies wrongdoing.
“We, her lawyers, are here … to prove the allegations against her have no basis,” Michael Poa of Duterte’s defense team told reporters.
In a statement, Duterte said the decision to “appear through counsel rather than testify personally does not diminish accountability or imply a lack of transparency.”
The outcome of the trial, which could last several months, may determine whether Duterte will be barred from running for president in the 2028 election. Only a guilty verdict by two-thirds of the bitterly divided 24-seat Senate can strip her of the vice presidency and permanently bar her from elected office.
Duterte remains a presidential frontrunner for 2028, with a late May survey suggesting 51 percent of respondents planned to vote for her.
Reporting from Manila, Al Jazeera’s Barnaby Lo said less than two years into the Marcos administration, the House of Representatives – then led by a cousin of the president – began investigating the vice president for alleged corruption. “The probe snowballed into the first impeachment complaint … which was voided by the Supreme Court,” he said. “But here we are now, with Duterte facing a second impeachment complaint.”
Duterte and Marcos are heirs to two of the country’s most powerful political dynasties. In 2022, they won an election on a joint ticket, but their alliance has since collapsed in an increasingly bitter feud that deepened after Rodrigo Duterte’s arrest and transfer to International Criminal Court (ICC) custody last year on murder charges linked to his so-called “war on drugs.”
The bitter fight has spilled into the Senate, raising questions about how the trial will unfold. In a dramatic turn on Monday, Duterte’s ally Senator Rodante Marcoleta was arrested on a plunder charge shortly before the start of the trial. In May, another ally, Senator Ronald “Bato” dela Rosa, disappeared from the Senate after chaos and gunfire erupted in the parliament building.
Source: www.aljazeera.com