Recto and Ledesma face complaints over PhilHealth fund transfer

Executive Secretary Ralph Recto and former PhilHealth CEO Emmanuel Ledesma Jr. face complaints of technical malversation, graft, plunder, and grave misconduct filed with the Ombudsman over the transfer of P60 billion in 'excess' PhilHealth funds to the national treasury in 2024.

On January 15, 2026, a group of medical doctors and lawyers led by counsel Rodel Taton filed complaints of technical malversation, graft, plunder, and grave misconduct against Executive Secretary Ralph Recto and former PhilHealth CEO Emmanuel Ledesma Jr. with the Office of the Ombudsman. The cases arise from PhilHealth's transfer of P60 billion in 'excess' funds to the national treasury, as mandated by a provision in the 2024 General Appropriations Act requiring government-owned and -controlled corporations to remit such funds for unprogrammed appropriations.

The Department of Finance, then led by Recto, issued a circular directing PhilHealth to remit the funds in tranches. The complaint accuses them of violating the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act through 'gross inexcusable negligence,' as they failed to examine laws like the Universal Health Care Act (RA 11223), which prohibits using PhilHealth's reserve funds as a general fund.

Complainants argue the transfer caused immense injury to Filipinos, as the P60 billion could have improved health services, expanded program benefits, or reduced member contributions. They charge technical malversation, stating the officials 'willfully, intentionally and illegally' diverted funds from their original purpose.

The group also alleges plunder due to a 'persistent pattern' of transferring excess funds from GOCCs like PhilHealth to fund unprogrammed appropriations amid prevalent ghost and substandard projects, exceeding the P50 million threshold under the Anti-Plunder Act. For grave misconduct, they cite a 'clear intent to violate the law' and 'flagrant disregard of an established rule.'

PhilHealth had remitted P60 billion out of P89.9 billion before the Supreme Court issued a temporary restraining order in response to petitions from health advocates. In December 2025, the SC ordered the funds' return and declared the GAA provision and DOF circular unconstitutional. President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. had previously directed the return, incorporated into the 2026 national budget. The Save the Philippines Coalition filed a similar complaint in December 2025. Recto has maintained his innocence, citing the SC ruling that found 'no criminal liability' and affirmed his actions were in 'good faith' per Congress's mandate.

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Antonio Trillanes and The Silent Majority group filing plunder and graft complaints against Vice President Sara Duterte at the Office of the Ombudsman.
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Trillanes and group file graft cases against Sara Duterte

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Former senator Antonio 'Sonny' Trillanes IV and The Silent Majority group filed plunder and graft complaints against Vice President Sara Duterte at the Office of the Ombudsman on January 21, 2026, over alleged misuse of confidential funds. The accusations include P650 million from the Office of the Vice President and Department of Education, along with other anomalies from her past roles. This follows an earlier impeachment dismissed by the Supreme Court in July 2025.

The Supreme Court did not rule the entire 2024 General Appropriations Act (GAA) unconstitutional or declare impeachment grounds against President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. Instead, it struck down a special provision on PhilHealth funds and upheld Marcos' certification of urgency. However, in his separate opinion, Justice Marvic Leonen argued that Marcos committed grave abuse of discretion.

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Following its push to redirect MAIFIP funds to LGUs, the Department of Health rejected proposals to shift them to PhilHealth over payment delays, with Secretary Ted Herbosa dismissing pork barrel claims as funds go directly to hospitals—amid the program's P51 billion 2026 budget hike.

The bicameral conference committee for the 2026 national budget began on December 13, 2025, focusing on reconciling versions for education, health, and agriculture sectors. Discussions stalled over farm-to-market roads funding due to corruption concerns, but lawmakers eventually agreed to increase it. Meanwhile, a congressman resigned from the House contingent amid complaints against him.

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Health Cabinet Secretary Aden Duale has addressed stakeholder claims of delayed payments to health facilities under the national health financing framework. He explained that the clinical review and verification of claims is an ongoing process to ensure accuracy and compliance. Duale revealed that 10,272 facilities have been contracted and are delivering services.

Building on DOH's recent push to route MAIFIP funds directly to LGUs and bicameral budget safeguards, the Senate has urged the Department of Health to fully eliminate guarantee letters in the Medical Assistance to Indigent and Financially Incapacitated Patients program for the 2026 budget. Sen. Sherwin Gatchalian emphasized that DOH can act via guidelines without legislation, aiming to depoliticize aid. Anti-corruption watchdogs say the letters foster patronage politics.

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President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. signed the P6.793-trillion national budget for 2026 on January 5, allocating a record P1.015 trillion to the Department of Education and P530.9 billion to the DPWH. He vetoed P92.5 billion in unprogrammed appropriations, leaving P150.9 billion, while vowing prudent spending to curb corruption. The budget bars political involvement in aid distribution, though critics question the remaining funds.

 

 

 

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