President Marcos’ April 2024 U.S. Visit: Key Takeaways (original) (raw)

The Return of Marcos Dynasty (Journal of Democracy)

Journal of Democracy, 2022

The essay analyzes the historical relevance, confluence of contributing factors, and broader systemic implications of the emphatic electoral victory of Ferdinand Marcos Jr. in the 2022 Philippine presidential election. Accordingly, it provides an overview of the structural vulnerabilities of Philippine democracy, the contingent factors that facilitated Marcos Jr.'s electoral success, the personal background and predisposition of the new president, and the likely key features and policy thrusts of his presidency. Overall, the essay frames Marcos Jr.'s victory as the latest victory of authoritarian populism. In historical terms, it represents the latest "counterrevolution" in modern history, namely, the successful return to power of the ancien régime through systematic exploitation of the vulnerabilities of postrevolutionary regimes.

Benigno Aquino, Jr. And The Making Of U.S. Policy In The Philippines During The Marcos Years

This essay attempts to illustrate the role of U.S. foreign policy in Philippine politics during the reign of Ferdinand Marcos, along with the assassination of popular opposition leader Benigno “Ninoy” Aquino Jr., leading to the comparatively peaceful transition that followed the fraudulent 1986 election. This point marked the end of Marcos’ slowly perishing regime and paved the way for a new democratic government under Corazon Aquino. Both the tragic event that left Aquino dead only minutes after his arrival from exile at Manila airport on August 23, 1983, as well as the subsequent change in U.S. perception of the ageing Marcos and his ability to manage domestic problem were crucially important in helping the country overcome and eventually end 21 years of suppressive presidential rule. Furthermore, it tries to cast light on the complex developments during the final years of Marcos’ autocratic rule and Washington’s constant inability and reluctance to critically discuss political reality in the Philippines. It also talks about Marcos’ ability to hold off political opponents, among which Aquino was the most influential and with whom he shared a special relationship of mutual respect and even admiration.

The Marcos Dynasty Rise, Fall, and Revival-

This paper examines the factors that explain the rise and fall of the Marcos dynasty in the Philippines and its return to power climaxing in the presidential victory of Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. in the 2022 national elections.

Marcos Jr. Visit to China: Big promises but little substance

Journal of International Politics and Society, 2023

Repackaged deals and no concessions on the South China Sea dispute: The US could benefit from Marcos Jr.'s empty-handed return from Beijing Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. kicked off the new year with a highly-anticipated state visit to Beijing (January 3-5), where he met with top Chinese leaders including Premiere Li Keqiang and paramount leader Xi Jinping. At first glance, the trip seemed highly successful, with the new Filipino president bagging $22.8 bn in investment pledges and finalising 14 agreements across all major areas of bilateral cooperation.

(Re)-writing the "New Society": A Multimodal Analysis of Marcos' Presidencies in Two Revisions of Philippines: Our Land and Heritage

The Journal of English Studies, 2019

MARTIAL LAW IS A CONTENTIOUS socio-political and socio-historical issue in the Philippines. Survivors and historians call it the “dark chapter” of the Philippines’ recent memory, wrought with Ferdinand Marcos’ legacy of “corruption, brutality, and impunity” (Robles xv). Even with various literatures documenting the controversies of the Martial Law era, historical revisionism has led to it being reframed, valued favorably, and perpetuated as such, especially by the surviving Marcoses, their supporters, apologists, and those born after Martial Law. Revisionism is exacerbated as current president Rodrigo Duterte has publicly expressed his admiration for Marcos, forming a political alliance with the surviving members of the Marcos family which has led to the allowance of the late president’s remains to be buried at the Libingan ng mga Bayani, the national cemetery for Filipino heroes located in Taguig, Metro Manila. Social media has also been instrumental in propagating historical revis...

Why Marcos Pa Rin!

Kasarinlan: Philippine Journal of Third World Studies, 2012

This introduction explains how the Third World Studies Center (TWSC) of the College of Social Sciences and Philosophy, University of the Philippines (UP) Diliman decided to hold the public forum series “Marcos Pa Rin! Ang mga Pamana at Sumpa ng Rehimeng Marcos (Marcos Still! The Legacy and the Curse of the Marcos Regime),” thereafter introducing the contents of this issue that were drawn from or linked to that series.

The Marcos Restoration: The CenPEG Papers on Election 2022

Center for People Empowerment in Governance (CenPEG), 2022

This collection of 17 monthly political analyses from January 2021 to May 2022 seeks to capture the nuances and complexities of the electoral process on the ground taking into account historical insights, the profiling of candidates and supporters, regular survey results, the tracking of political realignments, and social media postings.

Where to Bury Marcos? Dead Body Politics in the Marcos Playbook

Kasarinlan: Philippine Journal of Third World Studies, 2016

Almost three decades after his demise, the burial of Ferdinand Marcos, former president and dictator, continues to be a divisive issue in Philippine politics. Even in death, he is still able to draw both feelings of veneration and rage. It is in this context that this article draws together several versions of Marcos’s dying wish on where he must be buried and juxtaposes these claims with the Marcoses’ political maneuverings to get back into power. The objective is not so much to determine with certainty Marcos’s wish, but rather to build a chronology of when his supposed wish was invoked, by whom, and for what political purpose. Relying on news accounts and other secondary sources, this article traces several versions of Marcos’s dying wish regarding his final resting place in the shifting accounts of his family members and close associates throughout the years after his death. Using the frame of dead body politics, this article offers a close scrutiny of how human remains have intermingled with the politics of the living. The article argues that both the disputes surrounding the final resting place of Marcos’s body and keeping his remains above ground as some sort of cult relic have served not only to sustain myths about his regime, but also to bolster the family’s extant political interests.