In a Congress long dulled by obedience, the rise of âCongressmeowâ Kiko Barzaga reveals both the fragility and faint hope of Philippine politics, showing that even within a broken machine, dissent can still make it purr with possibility.
The ICCâs rejection of Rodrigo Duterteâs release revealed not only his personal reckoning, it also exposed the enduring cycle of power, privilege, and impunity that continues to dominate Philippine governance.
The ICCâs rejection of Duterteâs plea was a moral awakening, reminding the nation that justice is earned through accountability, not emotion or influence.
A nation with a full government but no governing, the Philippines now drifts in the emptiness between power and accountability, its institutions intact in form yet hollow in function as corruption thrives and conscience resigns.
The appointment of Justice Secretary Boying Remulla as Ombudsman signals not reform but retreat, turning what should be the nationâs final guardian of accountability into a protective wall for those in power and reducing the fight against corruption to mere political theater.
Magalong and Lacsonâs resignations reveal a government where corruption thrives, allies stay untouchable, and Marcos Jr.âs promise of reform sinks under the weight of impunity.
Amid the flood-control scandal that has shaken Congress, Senator Alan Peter Cayetanoâs call for snap elections exposes not reform but reinvention, a political performance meant to distance, distract, and disguise ambition as moral reckoning.
Philippine politics unfolds like a Godfather saga where power is masked by legality, scandals echo loyalty oaths, and the true cost of corruption is borne not by the dons, but by ordinary people left drowning in broken trust.
In the flood-control scandal that now engulfs his presidency, Ferdinand Marcos Jr. faces a defining choice between family loyalty and national legacy, one that could either redeem his name or drown it in historyâs recurring corruption.