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President Marcos’ lifestyle check order is a necessary start

August 30, 2025

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Manila Bulletin

President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.'s directive to conduct lifestyle checks on government officials—starting with the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH)—is a long-overdue step in addressing one of the country’s most persistent cancers — systemic corruption. But for this move to yield meaningful results, it must go beyond symbolism. It must be deep, wide-reaching, and unflinching—even if it means confronting the most powerful figures in Philippine politics.

The President’s order came amid the growing controversy over anomalous flood control projects, which are once again under public scrutiny after the President’s State of the Nation Address where he exposed the substandard projects, saying “Mahiya naman kayo” to those involved. And recently, a Senate hearing had uncovered ghost projects.

In a country regularly battered by monsoon rains and typhoons, flood control infrastructure is a lifeline. When billions are poured into projects that fail to deliver—or worse, never get built at all—this isn’t just corruption. It’s criminal negligence that endangers lives and livelihoods.

Malacañang confirmed that the checks would begin with DPWH officials. But this must not stop there. Communications Undersecretary Claire Castro clarified that the President’s instruction covers "all those involved in anomalous flood control projects," and could extend to other agencies as necessary. That’s the right signal—but the real test lies in the follow-through.

المزيد من القصص من Manila Bulletin

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High expectations

At 38 floors up, Finestra at Solaire Resort North makes a case for everyday Italian in QC

time to read

3 mins

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BAFTA 2026: ‘One Battle After Another’ wins six awards

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time to read

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Ask... seek... knock

The essence of prayer is petitioning to God to grant us something from his bountiful graces.

time to read

2 mins

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Palace denies Marcos seeking reconciliation with VP Sara

Malacañang has belied the claims made by former presidential spokesperson Harry Roque that President Marcos is seeking to reconcile with Vice President Sara Duterte.

time to read

2 mins

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Public debt surges, private sector cautious

Public and private debt in the Philippines continued to diverge as households and firms remain cautious despite lower interest rates, while the government sustains massive borrowings to revive slowing economic growth, the latest Institute of International Finance (IIF) data showed.

time to read

2 mins

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Manila Bulletin

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LTO-7 cracks down vs modified mufflers

The Land Transportation Office-Central Visayas (LTO-7) has intensified its crackdown against loud modified mufflers.

time to read

1 min

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The beauty of the drive: Alone, but never lonely

In my last column, we ended the adventure by talking about the island province of Guimaras, which is only a short boat ride from Iloilo City, Iloilo.

time to read

3 mins

February 26, 2026

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