Imelda Marcos arrives at the Commission on Elections to lend support for her daughter Imee Marcos in filing her candidacy for a Senate seat in 2018 in Manila.
In a bid to rewrite the past, Marcos narrates polished videos that portray his parents as philanthropists and his father as a great innovator, sidestepping any mention of human rights abuses or theft of the national treasury. Such myth-making glorifies a period of tyranny and corruption in which Marcos the son was as invested as his parents, Scalice says. The danger is not that Marcos Jr. will bring back martial law, he says — rather that “a brutal dictatorship is being rehabilitated and brought back into Philippine life.”
Former Supreme Court Justice Antonio Carpio, who supports current Vice President Leni Robredo’s candidacy for president, says the newest demand letter is only the latest of several sent over the past two decades that Marcos has shown a “willful refusal” to pay. Twenty-five years ago, the Supreme Court ruled that 23 billion pesos was due. Carpio says with interest and penalties, the tax obligation has likely ballooned and the Marcos heirs should be criminally charged for lack of payment.
Manila-based political analyst Richard Heydarian says Marcos has effectively tapped into discontent over the governments that followed his father’s rule. Successive administrations did not, as promised, narrow the gap between the rich and poor or stamp out corruption, he says.says nearly 24% of Filipinos, or 26 million people, lived below the poverty threshold in 2021, a result exacerbated by the pandemic.
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