
Olive branch: (From left) Marcos said he is willing to mend ties with Sara’s family following the results of the midterm election. — AFP
PRESIDENT Ferdinand Marcos Jr said he is willing to mend ties with the family of Vice-President Sara Duterte after candidates supported by his estranged deputy won more seats than expected during last week’s Senate election.
“I want to get along with everyone,” Marcos said in an interview streamed on his Facebook page yesterday.
“I need friends, not enemies. As much as possible, I want stability, peace so that we can do our jobs.”
It’s not the first time that Marcos has struck a cordial tone in his feud with Sara, earlier calling the row a “storm in a teacup”.
But his latest comments come after the midterm election where Duterte-backed candidates won at least four of 12 Senate seats up for grabs, more than surveys had predicted.
Marcos and Sara partnered to win the 2022 national election, but their ties collapsed due to political differences, prompting her to quit the Cabinet last year.
Marcos’ allies at the House of Representatives impeached Sara in February over her alleged death threat against Marcos and misusing public funds, accusations she denies.
The following month, the Marcos administration facilitated the arrest of her father, former president Rodrigo Duterte, and his detention at the International Criminal Court in the Netherlands, where he is awaiting trial for alleged crimes against humanity during his drug war.
But even before her father’s arrest, Sara said she didn’t see the possibility of patching up relations with Marcos, declaring then that it had “reached the point of no return”.
The president is extending an olive branch amid his declining popularity and following the underwhelming performance of the administration’s Senate slate last week.
“Let’s work together, even if we don’t agree on policy,” he said.
But he distanced himself from Sara’s impeachment case ahead of the Senate trial set for July.
“The impeachment is already with the Senate. Let’s leave it with them; there’s a process,” he said. — Bloomberg