Philippine Vice President Duterte’s impeachment trial begins: What we know
Philippine Vice President Sara Duterte’s impeachment trial on charges of mishandling government funds and making threats against President Ferdinand Marcos Jr has begun after months
Philippine Vice President Sara Duterte’s impeachment trial on charges of mishandling government funds and making threats against President Ferdinand Marcos Jr has begun after months of heightened political tensions in the country. In a dramatic turn, Duterte ally Senator Rodante Marcoleta was arrested on a plunder charge shortly before the start of the trial on Monday, throwing support for Duterte in the Senate into doubt. Duterte is the first vice president to undergo an impeachment trial. The outcome could determine whether she will be barred from running for president in the next election – and the future political landscape of the Philippines as Marcos looks towards the end of his final term in office. So why has Duterte been impeached, and why is her trial significant? Here’s what we know Who is Sara Duterte? Duterte is the daughter of former President Rodrigo Duterte, who is on trial before the International Criminal Court in The Hague on charges of crimes against humanity during his time as president and mayor of Davao City on the southern Philippine island of Mindanao. In 2022, she agreed to run as vice president alongside Marcos, son of the man who ruled the Philippines for 20 years before his toppling in 1986 during mass protests called the People Power Revolution. The Marcos and Duterte families are the most powerful clans in the country. Ultimately, Marcos won the presidency and Sara Duterte became his vice president. In February, she announced she would run for president in 2028, but if she is convicted in her impeachment trial, she could be prevented from standing for the next election. Why has she been impeached? In May, the House of Representatives voted overwhelmingly to impeach Sara Duterte. The charges against her include two violations of the constitution and betrayal of public trust for misuse of confidential government funds, failure to disclose her wealth, bribery and making death threats against Marcos; his wife, Liza Araneta; and former House Speaker Martin Romualdez. One of the most damning allegations in the complaint against the vice president relates to private bank transactions flagged by the anti-money-laundering agency of more than $110m.
According to the Philippine news outlet Rappler, her trial began at 2pm (06:00 GMT) on Monday and is expected to go on for several months. Duterte has denied any wrongdoing and has insisted her impeachment is politically motivated. If her impeachment trial finds her guilty of any or all of the charges, there is a range of possible outcomes. Duterte will be removed from office, but the Senate could also permanently disqualify her from holding any public office, and she could face a separate trial for criminal offences. On Monday, her lawyer Michael Poa told reporters the defence was prepared to prove the allegations were “baseless”. She also faced impeachment on similar grounds in February 2025, but at that time, she was able to stop the procedure by petitioning the Supreme Court to declare the move unconstitutional on technical grounds. How did this all happen? In May 2022, Sara Duterte and Marcos formed a political alliance and successfully won the presidential and vice presidential elections. But cracks in their relationship began to appear when legislators in the Senate started investigating her use of government funds. In June 2024, she resigned from her post as education secretary in the cabinet but remained Marcos’s deputy. In October that year, Duterte told reporters that her relationship with Marcos had become so “toxic” that she sometimes imagines beheading him. She also confessed that she felt “used” after teaming up with Marcos. She threatened to dig up the remains of Marcos’s father, the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos Sr, from the national cemetery and dump them in the sea. The Duterte family also made drug use allegations against Marcos in 2024. The pair also disagreed over policies relating to the South China Sea with Marcos ordering the navy to stand up to China in the disputed sea in sharp contrast to Rodrigo Duterte’s pro-China policies. Sara Duterte resigned from the cabinet in June 2024. In November 2024, she made a direct threat to have Marcos assassinated if she were killed. “This country is going to hell because we are led by a person who doesn’t know how to be a president and who is a liar,” she said in a profanity-laced broadcast on her Facebook page.
