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Philippine lawmakers impeach presidential hopeful Sara Duterte

By Thomson Reuters May 11, 2026 | 1:40 AM

By Karen Lema and Mikhail Flores

MANILA, May 11 (Reuters) – Philippine lawmakers on Monday overwhelmingly backed the impeachment of Vice President Sara Duterte, setting the stage for a trial ​in the Senate that could end her hopes for ‌a presidential run in 2028.

A House justice committee had last month found probable cause for her impeachment in a petition from activists accusing her of misusing public funds, accumulating unexplained wealth and threatening the lives of President ‌Ferdinand ​Marcos Jr, his wife and the former ⁠House speaker.

The petition was ⁠backed by 255 of 318 lawmakers on Monday, surpassing the one‑third threshold required.

With her ally-turned-enemy Marcos limited by the constitution to a single term in office, Duterte is the clear ​favourite to succeed him in 2028, but the impeachment could derail her bid.

Duterte denies wrongdoing, and her legal team has ⁠described the impeachment effort as defective ⁠and a “fishing expedition”.

The Senate must convene a trial with ​its members as jurors. Duterte faces removal from office and a ​ban from politics if convicted.

The impeachment effort is the ‌latest in a series of setbacks for the influential Duterte family, with the vice president feeling constant heat from her bitter feud with Marcos and her father Rodrigo Duterte awaiting trial at ⁠the International Criminal Court over a war on drugs that killed thousands of people during his 2016-2022 presidency.

But in what could be a ⁠boost for Duterte, ‌there was drama on Monday in the upper ⁠house Senate, where a motion was passed to ​remove ‌its president and replace him with Alan Peter ​Cayetano, a ⁠staunch loyalist of her family.

The change in Senate leadership means Cayetano, a former running mate of Duterte’s father, would be the presiding judge if an impeachment trial is convened.

(Reporting by Karen Lema; Additional reporting by Adrian Portugal and Nestor Corrales; Editing by Martin Petty ​and John Mair)