House justice committee examines substance of Marcos impeachment complaints

The House justice committee ruled on Monday that two impeachment complaints against President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. were sufficient in form. On Tuesday, February 3, 2026, the panel will assess if they hold sufficient substance. If approved, the process will advance to notify Marcos.

On Monday, February 2, 2026, the House justice committee, chaired by Rep. Gerville Luistro, voted that two impeachment complaints against President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. were sufficient in form. The complaint filed by private lawyer Andre de Jesus passed 46-1, with one abstention. The Makabayan bloc's complaint, led by former congresswoman Liza Maza, passed 35-9, with one abstention.

Rep. Bienvenido Abante was the sole dissenter, arguing the complaints lacked form and wasted public funds. Rep. Rufus Rodriguez questioned the Makabayan complaint's verification due to missing notarization, but the vote proceeded after confirming both followed the same format.

On Tuesday, February 3, 2026, at 10 a.m., the committee resumes to evaluate the complaints' substance, including allegations of corruption in public works projects, budget irregularities, enabling former President Rodrigo Duterte's arrest and transfer to The Hague, and claims of drug addiction in Jett Nisay's endorsement. If approved, this would initiate the first impeachment proceeding of the 20th Congress, notifying Marcos to respond.

Rep. Ysabel Maria Zamora stated the recent Supreme Court ruling on Vice President Sara Duterte's case has no effect, as these complaints were filed by ordinary citizens and endorsed by House members, unlike Duterte's. Reps. Luistro and Keith Flores agreed. House Senior Deputy Majority Leader Lorenz Defensor emphasized the House is not bound by SC rulings on impeachment rules due to separation of powers, following the 1987 Constitution's intent instead.

Constitutional framer Rene Sarmiento criticized the SC decision as judicial overreach that hinders future impeachments. From Malacañang, Presidential Communications Undersecretary Claire Castro said Marcos committed no impeachable offense but is concerned about economic impacts. 'He did nothing wrong, but it will affect the whole country,' she said.

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The House Committee on Justice ruled on March 4, 2026, that the two impeachment complaints against Vice President Sara Duterte—filed in early February and transmitted to the Speaker's office—are sufficient in substance, voting 54-1 to advance proceedings. Duterte has 10 days to respond. Separately, she filed a perjury complaint against former intelligence officer Ramil Madriaga, whose affidavit supported the complaints.

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The House of Representatives’ committee on justice has voted to adopt its February 4 report declaring the impeachment complaints against President Marcos insufficient in substance. The vote was 39-4, led by chairperson Representative Gerville Luistro of Batangas. It was added to the plenary session agenda and forwarded to the rules committee.

More leaders in the House of Representatives have dismissed talk of impeaching President Marcos, stating there is no formal complaint or justification yet. Officials describe the discussions as mere rumors without substance for action. The majority in Congress continues to back the president firmly.

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Progressive groups filed a second impeachment complaint against President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. with the House of Representatives on January 22, 2026, but claimed the chamber refused to accept it. Endorsed by the Makabayan bloc, it accuses him of betrayal of public trust. Petitioners left a copy at the secretary general's office.

The House of Representatives is ready to receive and act on any impeachment complaint against Vice President Sara Duterte starting February 6, public accounts committee chair Terry Ridon said. This follows the Supreme Court's decision clarifying notice requirements for the express route of impeachment filing. The court's one-year bar rule against Duterte lapses on that date.

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San Juan City Rep. Bel Zamora believes the House committee on justice has a solid case for impeaching Vice President Sara Duterte and can secure enough votes for a Senate trial. She said they need around 106 votes, or one-third, and they have the numbers. Duterte's camp has filed a Supreme Court petition to halt the proceedings.

 

 

 

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