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Philippine election: Can Leni Robredo’s ‘pink wave’ reverse the Bongbong Marcos tide?

  • Weeks out from the May 9 poll, VP Leni Robredo’s supporters are going all out to canvass for votes, including running soup kitchens, knocking on doors and holding street rallies
  • The strength of the ‘pink wave’ has unsettled some backers of frontrunner Ferdinand ‘Bongbong’ Marcos Jnr, who have belittled the movement online

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Philippine VP Leni Robredo greets supporters during a campaign rally in Borongan city. Photo: AFP

As the Philippine presidential election nears, a people’s campaign for Leni Robredo has reached a fever pitch, with a “pink wave” of supporters working day and night to close the gap between her and front runner Ferdinand Marcos Jnr on May 9.

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Property agent Nena Divino, 82, says her days are crammed full with organising voter education forums, supporting a community pantry to feed the hungry, and fielding volunteers for rallies and house-to-house campaigns in Manila’s suburban Quezon City.

It is not her first time supporting a Marcos rival. The grandmother of nine in 1986 campaigned for Corazon Aquino when she ran against the dictator Ferdinand Marcos – Marcos Jnr’s father. “Because of our present government, we are looking for a new kind of leadership,” she told This Week in Asia.

In the working-class neighbourhood of Obrero in Quezon City, John Toledo, 29, is part of a growing army of volunteers campaigning door to door and on the streets. Every night, the literature teacher at the state-funded Polytechnic University of the Philippines pushes a cart offering free hot lugaw, or porridge – a dish that has long been associated with Robredo because of her community work.

Toledo says he decided to back Robredo, the country’s current vice-president, after examining her track record, particularly during the Covid-19 pandemic when she provided personal protective equipment to frontline medical staff and organised vaccinations for the poor.

Volunteers for Leni Robredo put up a tarpaulin with Robredo’s image on a gate during a house-to-house campaign in Las Pinas, suburban Manila. Photo: AFP
Volunteers for Leni Robredo put up a tarpaulin with Robredo’s image on a gate during a house-to-house campaign in Las Pinas, suburban Manila. Photo: AFP

Robredo, a human rights lawyer, has cited the rise of disinformation and the threat of a return to the graft and human rights abuse-ridden politics of the Marcos era as among the reasons she is seeking the top job.

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