Impeaching Marcos or Duterte in 2026 becomes more difficult

Rumors are growing of potential impeachment proceedings against President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. or Vice President Sara Duterte, but such complaints face significant hurdles due to legal constraints and political realities. Officials say there are no grounds for impeaching Marcos, and the Supreme Court's recent ruling has altered the process.

Amid growing rumors of potential impeachment proceedings against President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. or Vice President Sara Duterte in the coming months, the National Unity Party (NUP) has dismissed any such move against Marcos as baseless. In a press conference on January 17, 2026, NUP chairman and House Deputy Speaker Ronaldo Puno stated that the party sees no constitutional or factual grounds to support a complaint. “Actually, I don’t see any grounds for filing an impeachment case against the President,” Puno said.

House deputy majority leader Zia Alonto Adiong labeled the impeachment talk as “political noise” intended to hinder efforts to hold officials accountable for the flood control issues. According to Rappler reports, the process has become more difficult due to the Supreme Court's updated guidelines, which diminish the political nature of impeachment and emphasize a judicial approach. Previously, complaints could advance quickly with sufficient signatures, but the new framework imposes stricter conditions to prevent fast-tracking to the Senate as a mere numbers game.

For any potential complaint against Vice President Sara Duterte, Congress will adhere to the Supreme Court's rulings. “So I think what the Supreme Court decision did was it reduced the political character of impeachment and made it more of a judicial process,” Puno explained. These changes make future impeachment efforts an uphill battle in the Philippines' political landscape.

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The Supreme Court has ruled that Vice President Sara Duterte's first impeachment case is unconstitutional due to violations of the one-year bar rule and due process. It clarified that new complaints can now be filed immediately. Duterte's lawyers are prepared for potential future proceedings.

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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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.

Bicol Saro party-list Rep. Terry Ridon stated that Vice President Sara Duterte's declaration of intent to run for president in 2028 is irrelevant to the House of Representatives' handling of the four impeachment complaints against her. Ridon emphasized that the House is focused on determining the sufficiency in form and substance of the complaints. The House committee on justice is set to begin deliberations tomorrow, March 2, 2026.

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The Supreme Court has reshaped how future impeachment cases will be initiated and assessed by ruling Vice President Sara Duterte’s impeachment unconstitutional. In its July 25, 2025 decision, the high court cited the House’s inaction and lack of due process as grounds for voiding it. It also laid down new standards for impeachments going forward.

Following its March 4 ruling on sufficiency in substance, the House Committee on Justice has found impeachment complaints against Vice President Sara Duterte to have sufficient grounds, paving the way for public hearings starting March 25, 2026, and continuing on April 14, 22, and 29.

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In a shifting political landscape, President Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. faces attempts to destabilize his administration, but structural changes make removal unlikely without constitutional processes. Economic stability and institutional reforms have neutralized traditional paths to ouster like military intervention or mass protests. Impeachment remains the only viable mechanism, though it faces significant hurdles in the current Congress.

 

 

 

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