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Clark touted as site of possible AI hub with collaboration from India

Infosys lounge at Davos — FACEBOOK.COM/INFOSYS

THE Department of Information and Communications Technology (DICT) said it wants to capture any overflow of artificial intelligence (AI) projects from India by establishing a dedicated AI lab in New Clark City.

“We want to explore how we can take advantage of the overflow of BPO (business process outsourcing) in India… We are putting a framework together on that (and it will involve establishing a hub) in New Clark City,” Information and Communications Technology Secretary Henry Rhoel R. Aguda told reporters on the sidelines of Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Editors and Economic Opinion Leaders forum on Tuesday.

The DICT is working on possible partnerships with major Indian BPOs like Infosys and Wipro, which already have Philippine operations, Mr. Aguda said.

“Their DR (disaster recovery) sites are here already, as well as their overflow. These companies have AI initiatives, so maybe they can establish AI hubs in Clark,” he noted.

The target is to create about 50,000 “high value” jobs in the next five years, he said.

Further, Mr. Aguda said collaborations with India are also planned for cybersecurity training, semiconductor workforce development, and mutual recognition of digital certifications. — Ashley Erika O. Jose

Mobile Number Portability Act touted as boosting competition, expanding choice

STOCK PHOTO | Image by terimakasih0 from Pixabay

THE Philippine Competition Commission (PCC) said the Mobile Number Portability (MNP) Act has encouraged more competitive behavior among mobile service providers (MSPs) by expanding consumer choices.

“The assessment shows that the MNP Act has encouraged more competitive behavior among MSPs in attracting and retaining subscribers,” the antitrust regulator said in a statement on Tuesday.

Republic Act No. 11202, or the MNP Act, was signed in 2019. The law enable network subscribers to retain their mobile numbers for free when switching between MSPs. 

Citing its competition impact assessment (CIA) study of the law, the PCC said the MNP Act provides sufficient safeguards against the abuses of dominant position by MSPs.

The law also has safeguards against discriminatory practices due to self-regulation, and the illicit access and use of personal information that may lead to anti-competitive conduct.

To attract users, MSPs developed online channels where subscribers can find information on the benefits of switching to their services, the PCC added.

Citing Telecommunications Connectivity, Inc. (TCI), PCC noted the significant influx of subscribers switching to the third player (DITO Telecommunity Corp.) during the first 10 months of implementation.

However, this trend declined in the coming months, the PCC noted.

TCI reported that less than 0.1% of registered mobile numbers switched from one MSP to another, during the first three years of implementation.

TCI is a joint venture formed by MSPs — Smart Communications, Inc., Globe Telecom, Inc., and DITO Telecommunity — to facilitate MNP services.

It serves as a clearing house that manages MNP services. This includes ensuring that subscribers can switch between MSPs without changing their mobile numbers.

However, the PCC noted issues with the law’s implementation that could indirectly affect competition.

This includes the low number of porting applications during first three years of MNP implementation, which could reflect subscribers’ limited knowledge of the MNP Act.

“If subscribers are unaware of their freedom to switch to another MSP when dissatisfied, they may not realize the full benefits of the bargaining power offered by RA 11202,” PCC said.

It also noted that the National Telecommunications Commission is in “proximal position” to advise the TCI and MSPs on competition matters.

The CIA study recommended the creation of joint awareness campaigns to reintroduce the MNP Act to the public. It also called on the need to revisit current porting capacities to minimize costs associated with unused slots.

The PCC conducts CIA studies to assess laws, regulations, and proposals that may potentially harm competition. — Beatriz Marie D. Cruz

Local digitalization deemed critical to achieving upper middle-income status

BW FILE PHOTO

REGULATORY REFORM centered on digitizing at the local level should be the focus areas in bringing the Philippines to upper middle-income status, officials said.

Speaking at the Makati Business Club’s Business-Government Forum on Tuesday, Ernesto V. Perez, director general of the Anti-Red Tape Authority, said innovation at the local government unit (LGU) level is key to improving the ease of doing business and expanding the tax base.

“To really develop the economy, we have to prioritize innovation at the local level because this is where businesses start,” he said.

Mr. Perez cited the rollout of the Electronic Business One-Stop Shop (eBOSS), a platform that streamlines and digitalizes business registration and related processes in LGUs.

He said the system encourages voluntary compliance by making it easier for enterprises to register and pay the correct taxes.

Mr. Perez said LGUs that have implemented eBOSS show substantial increases in both revenue collection and business registrations.

“When businessmen know that it is easier for them to register their business, and at the same time they can not engage in business illegally without being caught, then they will voluntarily register their business,” he added.

However, Mr. Perez said adoption remains limited, with only a fraction of the 1,642 LGUs having fully complied with or integrated the system.

He said scaling up implementation would require collaboration with the private sector.

“The problem is huge. We cannot cover the entire country on our own. By partnering with the private sector, we are able to tackle the problem,” he said.

Meanwhile, acting Budget Secretary Rolando U. Toledo said fiscal consolidation and sustained infrastructure spending will be critical to achieving income targets.

“One of the indicators that we are looking at is how we are going to implement our fiscal consolidation strategy,” he said.

Mr. Toledo said the government is monitoring growth trends and the debt-to-GDP ratio as part of its strategy.

He said the government is also seeking to improve investment in infrastructure projects, which he said will boost the economy and employment. 

“This actually has a multiplier effect not only in terms of the growth of the economy, but also in job generation,” Mr. Toledo said. — Vonn Andrei E. Villamiel

Auction announced for contract to upgrade Antique airport runway

PNA PHOTO BY ANNABEL CONSUELO J. PETINGLAY

THE Department of Transportation (DoTr) said it plans to offer the runway re-paving contract for the airport in Antique province at an indicative price of nearly P100 million.

In a bid notice dated Feb. 21, the DoTr said the runway asphalt overlay contract for Antique Airport, also known as Evelin B. Javier Airport in San Jose de Buenavista, is expected to cost P96.44 million.

The winning bidder will get 120 days to complete the project, the DoTr said, adding that bidders must have completed a project of a similar type in the last 10 years to pre-qualify to bid.

Interested parties have until March 16 to submit proposals.

The auction is restricted to Filipino citizens, sole proprietorships, cooperatives, and partnerships or organizations with at least 60% interest or outstanding capital stock belonging to Filipinos.

The DoTr this week invited potential bidders to redevelop the airports in Naga City, Ormoc, Tacloban, and Kalibo, with the contracts valued at a combined P1.65 billion. 

The DoTr’s airport upgrade program is focused on improving many provincial airports to accommodate at least narrowbody jets to handle the growing passenger capacities. The capacity to handle Boeing 737 or Airbus A320 aircraft — the most prevalent single-aisle jet models — also suggests upgrades to attract direct international flights. — Ashley Erika O. Jose

House committee approves e-Bayad measure

FREEPIK

A HOUSE of Representatives committee approved on Tuesday a measure seeking to make digital payment systems in government and merchants more mainstream.

The House Banks and Financial Intermediaries committee said it will consolidate 15 bills proposing that kiosks and shops include digital payment platforms to help keep the government from further falling behind its digitization targets.

“This would make (digital payments) available as an option for consumers,” Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Deputy Governor Mamerto E. Tangonan told BusinessWorld on the sidelines of the Committee hearing. “We’re going to mobilize the government to (become) the lead adopter of digital disbursement and collections.”

The Philippines is at risk of failing to hit its digitalization target by 2028 as outlined in the Philippine Development Plan (PDP).

The committee approved House Bill 7672, or the proposed e-Bayad Act, as the consolidated substitute bill for the various pending measures. The proposal was identified by the Legislative-Executive Development Advisory Council (LEDAC) last year as a priority bill.

The bill requires all government agencies to adopt digital payments for disbursements and collections either via in-house payment solutions or employing payment service providers that facilitate the real-time receipt of funds.

For merchants, the bill orders local government units (LGUs) to encourage and incentivize merchants via reduced fees, as well as assist small and micro-merchants in becoming more capable users of digital payments.

“The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), Department of Trade and Industry (DTI), Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG), and the Department of Information and Communications Technology (DICT) shall also facilitate measures to provide capacity building for the covered agencies and merchants on the use of digital payments,” according to the bill.

Mr. Tangonan said the bill will help the government meet its 60-70% target for the share of digital payments in retail by 2028, which is one of the PDP goals.

BSP Governor Eli M. Remolona, Jr. said on Friday that the government could fail to reach its payments digitalization targets by the deadline due to slower-than-expected adoption due to worries about cyber risks.

In 2024, online payments accounted for a 57.4% share by volume and 59% by value of retail transactions, according to the BSP’s 2024 Status of Digital Payments in the Philippines report. These are up from 52.8% and 55.3%, respectively, in 2023.

Mr. Tangonan said that while the government has successfully enabled early adopters of digital payments, a growth driver is needed to boost late-stage adapters.

“We’re trying to find a second wind, the next breakthrough that will push our sales towards more growth. But without that… it’s really going to be hard,” he said.

“We need to start encouraging the late majority to adapt. Meaning, in the innovation lifecycle, we got the early adopters, the early majority, I think we got that. So we’re now working on the late majority.”

The BSP also continues to work with industry to lower fees to further boost digital payment adoption, Mr. Tangonan said.

He noted that among lower income users, fees serve as a “disincentive.”

He added the central bank is looking at implementing a pricing mechanism to lower fees, but noted that it is not feasible for banks to go to zero fees.

“In other countries, they can set zero fees. It’s not as feasible here. So, we have to work with something that can be successful.” — Aaron Michael C. Sy

Buying lifts PSE index to over nine-month high

BW FILE PHOTO

THE MAIN INDEX soared to an over nine-month high on Tuesday as investors bought blue chips on bullish prospects.

The Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) jumped by 0.91% or 59.47 points to close at 6,547.98, while the broader all shares index went up by 0.63% or 22.86 points to end at 3,614.47.

This was the PSEi’s best finish in more than nine months or since it ended at 6,551.81 on May 14, 2025.

The main index opened Tuesday’s trading session at 6,508.82, rising from Monday’s close of 6,488.51. It fell to a low of 6,482.13 intraday but finished at its best showing for the session.

“The local bourse breezed through the 6,500 hurdle as investors positioned on index heavyweights with promising prospects, led by ICT which ascended to another all-time high,” AP Securities, Inc. said in a market note, referring to the ticker symbol of International Container Terminal Services, Inc., whose shares rose by P22 or 3.27% to close at P694 each on Tuesday.

“The local market extended its gains as investors continued to cheer the local currency’s improved position against the US dollar. Optimism towards fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 corporate results also helped in the climb,” Philstocks Financial, Inc. Research Manager Japhet Louis O. Tantiangco said in a Viber message.

The peso on Monday surged to a five-month high of P57.575 versus the dollar as the US Supreme Court struck down the “reciprocal” tariffs imposed by President Donald J. Trump. However, on Tuesday, the local currency fell by 18 centavos to close at P57.755 as Mr. Trump said he would raise a temporary tariff from 10% to 15% on US imports from all countries.

The Trump administration is also considering new national security tariffs on industries like large-scale batteries, cast iron and iron fittings, plastic piping, industrial chemicals and power grid and telecom equipment, the Wall Street Journal said, based on a Reuters report.

Majority of sectoral indices closed higher on Tuesday. Services rose by 2.18% or 58.90 points to 2,757.13; industrials increased by 1.48% or 137.43 points to 9,399.60; holding firms went up by 0.38% or 19.63 points to 5,155.86; mining and oil climbed by 0.05% or 10.97 points to 19,368.79; and financials inched up by 0.03% or 0.85 point to 2,182.44. Meanwhile, property declined by 0.4% or 8.98 points to 2,202.83.

Advancers narrowly outnumbered decliners, 100 to 98, while 74 names closed unchanged.

“JG Summit Holdings, Inc. was the day’s index leader, climbing 4.71% to P31.10. Ayala Land, Inc. was the day’s worst index performer, dropping 5.08% to P20.55,” Mr. Tantiangco said.

Value turnover rose to P8.07 billion on Tuesday with 2.07 billion shares traded from the P6.12 billion with 867.18 million issues that changed hands on Monday.

Net foreign buying went down to P406.68 million from the P858.86 million in the previous session. — A.G.C. Magno

Philippines seeks lift on financing cap, 15-year limit for AFP modernization

AN F-16 FIGHTER JET from the 2024 US-Philippine joint military exercises at Basa Air Base, Pampanga. — PHILIPPINE STAR/WALTER BOLLOZOS

THE Philippines’ Department of National Defense (DND) is pushing to remove restrictions on both foreign and local financing for defense acquisitions and to scrap the 15-year timeline governing the Armed Forces of the Philippines’ (AFP) modernization program.

At a Senate hearing on Tuesday, Defense Assistant Secretary Erik Lawrence S. Dy said the agency wants to lift the $300-million ceiling on foreign loans under Presidential Decree No. 415, signed in 1974, while securing authorization for local financing options to fund defense equipment.

“As it is, defense equipment acquisitions are not covered by local loans, and foreign loans have a cap, so we want to have the ceiling removed,” he told senators, noting that it limits the government’s ability to acquire high-cost systems.

Major General Ivan Dr. Papera, chief of the AFP Systems Engineering and Modernization Office, said most defense acquisitions rely on annual funding through the General Appropriations Act and Multi-Year Contractual Authority, which typically covers five to seven years. Foreign financing, in contrast, can extend 10 to 15 years, offering more flexibility for larger purchases.

“We will not be able to capitalize on foreign financing for bigger platforms and capabilities as planned in our capability development documents,” he told the hearing. “Multi-role fighters and satellites require hundreds of billions [of pesos], and we only appropriate P35 billion to P50 billion a year.”

The DND is also advocating for the removal of the 15-year modernization timeline, arguing that acquisitions should be driven by operational needs rather than fixed schedules. “We feel like it’s already obsolete and acquisitions should be needs-based, not on specific timelines due to our evolving needs,” Mr. Dy said.

Senator Lorna Regina “Loren” B. Legarda, who heads the National Defense and Security committee, backed the proposals, noting the importance of agility in defense planning.

“We need a DND that can respond to the future, with the professional civilian capability, legal authority, and funding tools to do its job well,” she said. “We also need an AFP that is not burdened by outdated planning cycles and bureaucratic constraints but is able to adapt swiftly to rapidly evolving technologies.”

The Philippines is concluding its military modernization program under the Horizon plan, launched in 2012 after tensions with China escalated following the Scarborough Shoal standoff.

Manila has earmarked roughly $35 billion for upgrades over the next decade, which has enabled the AFP to acquire advanced warships, missile systems and other platforms aimed at countering China’s growing presence in the South China Sea.

NO CHINESE RECLAMATION
Meanwhile, the Philippine military has not observed any Chinese island-building activities in the disputed Scarborough Shoal, navy spokesman Rear Admiral Roy Vincent T. Trinidad told a news briefing, but noted the continuing “illegal presence” of Chinese ships in the area.

He said the AFP has not monitored any land reclamation activities in Scarborough, adding that authorities have “appropriate security measures” in place to prevent it in the contested feature. He did not elaborate.

“What we have monitored is the continued illegal presence and their buoys that have been established and put up… and the barrier,” he said. “Apart from that, no construction has been monitored on Bajo de Masinloc.”

The Chinese Embassy in Manila did not immediately reply to a Viber message seeking comment.

Scarborough Shoal, known in the Philippines as Panatag and Bajo de Masinloc, and called Huangyan Dao by China, has long been at the center of maritime tensions between the nations that have competing claims over the resource-rich South China Sea.

A vast fishing lagoon near key shipping lanes, the shoal lies within Manila’s 200-nautical mile exclusive economic zone. China has since asserted control over the feature after its maritime forces seized it in 2012 following a standoff with Philippine forces.

Mr. Trinidad said Chinese maritime forces now have a “semi-permanent” presence in the South China Sea and near disputed atolls due to the scale of their naval deployment aimed at asserting maritime control over swaths of contested waters.

Scarborough lies about 222 kilometers (km) west of Luzon island and is almost 900 km away from Hainan, the nearest major Chinese landmass.

In September, China approved the creation of a 3,500-hectare nature reserve at the northeast rim of the shoal, which it said is intended to preserve the ecological diversity of one of the most contested areas in the waterway.

Anxiety over land reclamation in Scarborough jolted Philippine authorities last year amid concerns that it could let China militarize the area and expand its presence near the mainland.

China has built man-made islands on numerous submerged features in the strategic waterway despite protests from neighboring countries, outfitting them with runways, hangars, radar systems and ports that could bolster its naval presence.

Chinese forces have built about 3,200 acres of new land in the heavily contested Spratly Islands since 2013, according to the Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative (AMTI).

In a separate report on Monday, AMTI said China’s maritime militia deployed “record-high” deployment of its fleet to the South China Sea last year. It monitored a daily average of 241 militia ships in the contested waters in 2025 from 232 vessels a year earlier.

“Most of these vessels are members of the Spratly Backbone Fishing Fleet, which is numerically larger than the professional component of the militia,” it said in a statement, noting that such ships could be as small as 35 meters in length.

AMTI said it only counted militia vessels 45 to 65 meters long for its analysis of satellite imagery. — A.H. Halili and Kenneth Christiane L. Basilio

Cash aid program doesn’t widen kids’ career dreams

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

By Erika Mae P. Sinaking

THE GOVERNMENT’S flagship cash transfer program has not widened the career ambitions of children from poor households, according to a study released by the Philippine Institute for Development Studies, even as beneficiaries continue to aspire to higher-paying professions.

In a discussion paper published Feb. 23, the state think tank said participation in the Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program (4Ps) has no measurable causal effect on children’s career aspirations.

“We find no detectable causal effect of 4Ps eligibility on children’s career aspirations,” authors Kris Ann M. Melad, Michael R. M. Abrigo, Douglas Kurt Gregor C. Diola and Centene V. Pablo said in the paper titled “Dreams and Small Means: Career Aspirations of Children in the Philippine 4Ps Program.”

Almost half of children surveyed, or 47.3%, said they aspire to professional careers, while 29.2% aim for service and sales jobs. But the probability of aspiring to professional or service occupations, as well as the income levels associated with children’s “dream jobs,” did not differ significantly between 4Ps beneficiaries and nonbeneficiaries, the study found.

The findings are based on data from 9,958 children aged 10 to 25. Of these, 5,218 came from 4Ps-eligible households and 4,740 from noneligible families. Researchers compared households that narrowly qualified for the program with those that narrowly missed the cutoff to isolate the program’s impact.

Among children from 4Ps households, the most cited dream job was police officer at 29.3%, followed by teacher at 26.8% and nurse at 9.4%. Commissioned armed forces officers (8.1%) and seafarers or ship deck crew (6.5%) rounded out the top five.

Engineering professionals, flight attendants, business service managers, medical doctors and chefs also featured prominently.

Children from non-4Ps households expressed nearly identical preferences. Teachers led at 28.9%, followed closely by police officers at 28.6% and nurses at 8%, underscoring minimal differences between the two groups.

The children’s ambitions contrast sharply with their parents’ occupations, which are concentrated in low-paying sectors such as agriculture and elementary work.

Based on estimates from the Family Income and Expenditure Survey, skilled agricultural and fishery workers earn about P316 daily, while workers in elementary occupations earn about P360.

By comparison, the professional occupations most aspired to by children are associated with estimated daily earnings of P1,071. Armed forces roles, the second-most aspired group, correspond to roughly P1,389 a day.

The study found that the strongest predictor of a child’s career aspiration was not 4Ps participation but parental expectations.

“When parents aspire for their child to become professional, children are substantially more likely to hold professional aspirations themselves,” the researchers said.

Gender gaps were also evident. Boys were much less likely to aspire to professional or service occupations, a disparity the authors said warrants closer policy attention.

Noncognitive traits such as grit, defined as perseverance toward long-term goals, and functional literacy were associated with a slightly higher likelihood of aspiring to professional careers, though their effects were modest compared with parental influence.

While earlier evaluations have shown that 4Ps improves school enrollment and educational attainment, the researchers said these gains have not translated into broader or more ambitious career goals.

They cited the possibility of a “scarcity mindset,” in which prolonged exposure to poverty narrows perceived opportunities even as financial constraints ease.

To address this, the authors recommended pairing cash transfers with career guidance, greater exposure to role models beyond children’s immediate communities and interventions aimed at raising parental expectations.

The 4Ps program is administered by the Department of Social Welfare and Development and covers millions of low-income households nationwide.

Senate body backs 2nd degree ban on political dynasties

PCOO

THE Philippine Senate is moving to bar relatives up to the second degree of consanguinity or affinity from holding public office, as lawmakers race to pass an anti-political dynasty measure before the end of March.

Senator Ana Theresia N. Hontiveros-Baraquel, who heads the Senate Committee on Electoral Reforms, said the chamber’s version of the bill seeks to prohibit spouses and relatives within the second civil degree from running for or occupying elective posts.

“This will be implemented starting in the next election,” she told reporters in mixed English and Filipino. “When that is done, it will shake things up at the local level.”

She added that the next Congress could amend or strengthen the measure further.

Asked whether the proposal could be approved before the end of March, she said the timeline remains feasible. “It’s still doable because it’s still February. We have the whole of March so that when the House version is completed, in the next month, we can conduct a bicameral conference,” she said.

Committee Report No. 33 consolidates eight bills seeking to prohibit political dynasties. The measure defines a political dynasty as the concentration of power by spouses or relatives up to the second degree across elective positions or party-list posts.

Under Senate Bill No. 1901, relatives or spouses would be barred from holding simultaneous or overlapping terms in national and local offices, as well as from occupying positions across party-list groups and elective posts. It also prohibits immediate succession, preventing a spouse or relative from taking over a position right after an incumbent family member’s term.

“There are penalties and mechanisms being provided to the Commission on Elections (Comelec) to enforce this prohibition,” Ms. Hontiveros said.

The bill authorizes the Comelec to cancel the certificate of candidacy of people found to be part of a political dynasty or those who willfully conceal such relationships. All aspirants must submit sworn declarations stating they do not fall within the prohibited degree of relation.

Concealment of information, falsification of documents, malicious filings, coercion or engineered resignations to enable relatives to run would be treated as election offenses under the Omnibus Election Code. In cases where multiple relatives file for the same position and none withdraw voluntarily, Comelec may resort to drawing lots.

Ms. Hontiveros said the proposal reflects the outcome of Senate hearings and consultations held in various regions, incorporating input from experts and citizens.

The House of Representatives is tackling its own version of the anti-dynasty bill.

Meanwhile, 41 business and civil society groups, including the Makati Business Club, Management Association of the Philippines and Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry urged lawmakers to adopt a stricter ban covering relatives up to the fourth degree of consanguinity or affinity.

In a joint statement, the groups said House Bill No. 6771 falls short of the Constitution’s mandate to ensure equal access to public service and prohibit political dynasties.

They warned that allowing succession, switching, substitution and rotation among relatives would perpetuate the dominance of few families. The groups also called for a mandatory cooling-off period equivalent to one electoral cycle.

President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. has urged Congress to fast-track the measure as part of a broader governance reform push following public backlash over alleged misuse of public funds.

Efforts to outlaw political dynasties have repeatedly stalled in a Legislature dominated by political families. Eight in 10 lawmakers belong to political dynasties, according to the Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism. — Adrian H. Halili

House body to start Sara impeachment review

Vice President Sara Duterte arrives at the Department of Justice, May 9, 2025. — PHILIPPINE STAR/RYAN BALDEMOR

THE House of Representatives Justice Committee will begin reviewing the merits of impeachment complaints against Philippine Vice-President Sara Duterte-Carpio next week, its chairwoman said on Tuesday, marking the first formal step in determining whether efforts to remove her from office have sufficient basis.

Batangas Rep. Gerville R. Luistro, who heads the 39-member body, said deliberations could take longer than previous impeachment proceedings against President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr., citing the volume of documents and breadth of allegations lodged against the Vice-President.

“The deliberations will take longer,” Ms. Luistro told reporters in Filipino. “Whatever procedure and parameters we used in the impeachment against the President, we will be adopting the same.”

She said lawmakers would examine each complaint ground by ground, requiring members to comment on every allegation. If a complaint cites multiple grounds for impeachment, the body will scrutinize each one before moving forward.

Three impeachment complaints have been filed since early February by civil society groups and activists, alleging that Ms. Duterte misused P612.5 million in confidential and intelligence funds allocated to the Office of the Vice-President and the Department of Education, which she used to head. A fourth complaint filed last week accused her of failing to fully disclose assets in her statements of net worth and of amassing wealth disproportionate to her lawful income.

The committee will first assess whether the complaints meet constitutional standards in form and substance. If lawmakers find probable cause, the committee will consolidate the complaints and proceed to a full inquiry.

The allegations center on corruption, unexplained wealth, violation of the Constitution and betrayal of public trust — all impeachable offenses under the 1987 Constitution.

Ms. Luistro said the body could continue hearings even during the congressional break if members determine that the complaints are sufficiently supported by evidence. Congress is set to adjourn on March 20 and will resume sessions on May 4.

The renewed impeachment efforts come as Ms. Duterte, 47, has declared her intention to run for President in 2028, a move that could put her political standing to the test. She is the daughter of former President Rodrigo R. Duterte, whose strong support base remains influential.

Impeachment proceedings against the Vice-President were revived after the Supreme Court blocked attempts in 2025 for violating procedural rules. More than a third of congressmen endorsed the complaint and transmitted it directly to the Senate without committee hearings, prompting legal challenges.

The Justice committee previously took two weeks to dismiss impeachment complaints against Mr. Marcos, finding them insufficient in substance. — Kenneth Christiane L. Basilio

DoJ, PNP team up for Feb. 25 rallies

People pass by a replica of EDSA People Power monument along Congressional Road, in Dasmariñas City in this file photo taken on Feb. 24, 2023. — PHILIPPINE STAR/EDD GUMBAN

THE Department of Justice (DoJ) on Tuesday said it had coordinated with the Philippine National Police (PNP) on security measures ahead of scheduled rallies on Feb. 25.

Justice spokesperson Raphael Niccolo L. Martinez told reporters in a Viber group chat that the PNP met with a panel of DoJ prosecutors on Monday to discuss security preparations, as civil society organizations announced demonstrations commemorating the 40th anniversary of the EDSA People Power Revolution.

“The DoJ through its prosecutors will be on standby to assist law enforcement in the conduct of Inquest, if necessary,” Mr. Martinez said. “Inquest proceedings are done to determine the validity of warrantless arrests.”

Meanwhile, labor groups also said on Tuesday that they will participate in pushing for the end of political dynasties, stronger anti-corruption measures, and the redistribution of wealth through living wages, worker protections, and improved public services.

In a separate public advisory, the Department of Labor and Employment reminded employers that Wednesday is an ordinary working day and that the “no work, no pay” rule applies.

Meanwhile, the Palace said President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. is studying suggestions to make Feb. 25 a regular holiday following proposals from lawmakers.

“He will study the suggestions regarding this matter,” Palace Press Officer Clarissa A. Castro told reporters via Viber.

Feb. 25 has been declared a special working day to mark the 40th anniversary of the revolution that ousted late President Ferdinand E. Marcos, Sr. from power.

On Oct. 13, 2023, the younger Marcos announced that Feb. 25 would not be a holiday in 2024 under Proclamation No. 368, with Malacañang saying that the observance was deemed to have minimal socioeconomic impact since it fell on a Sunday.

On Monday, lawmakers from Akbayan Party-list filed House Bill 7911 to restore the Feb. 25 anniversary of the revolution.

The proposal seeks to restore consistent recognition of the historic commemoration, which has been irregularly observed in recent years.

The lawmakers said that the holiday would reaffirm the significance of the 1986 revolution that restored democracy in the Philippines. — Erika Mae P. Sinaking and Chloe Mari A. Hufana

Next PHL leader must know economics

President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. joined a fireside chat during the Association of Southeast Asian Nations Editors and Economic Opinion Leaders Forum at a hotel in Makati City on Tuesday. — PHILIPPINE STAR/NOEL PABALATE

PRESIDENT Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. said economic competency and nation-building are the defining qualities of future Philippine leadership, adding that productivity and private-sector collaboration will remain central to sustainable growth.

“Somebody who understands economics. That’s the first thing,” he said when asked what qualities he would seek in the next president of the republic during the Association of Southeast Asian Nations Editors and Economic Opinion Leaders Forum in Makati City on Tuesday.

Economic literacy is essential for job creation, inflation control, and ensuring food security, he noted.

Mr. Marcos reiterated that high-level leadership requires experience and public familiarity, noting the difficulty of elevating individuals without political backgrounds into presidential contenders within the Philippines’ competitive political landscape.

He declined to name a possible successor ahead of the 2028 polls following Vice-President Sara Duterte-Carpio’s announcement last week to run for the government’s top post, adding that identifying successors remains premature. — Chloe Mari A. Hufana

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