Marcos impeachment complaint reaches speaker's office in days

Unlike complaints against Vice President Sara Duterte, the impeachment complaint against President Ferdinand "Bongbong" Marcos Jr. was sent to the House speaker's office just two days after filing. House Secretary General Cheloy Velicaria-Garafil confirmed this on January 21. The swift transmission raises questions about whether it benefits the president against future complaints.

On January 19, lawyer Andre de Jesus filed an impeachment complaint against Marcos, endorsed by Rep. Jett Nisay of the Pusong Pinoy Party-list. The grounds include culpable violation of the Constitution, graft and corruption, and betrayal of public trust. Accusations involve orchestrating the arrest and transfer of former President Rodrigo Duterte to the International Criminal Court, authorizing unprogrammed appropriations, receiving kickbacks, creating the Independent Commission for Infrastructure to protect allies, and illegal drug use.

House Secretary General Cheloy Velicaria-Garafil transmitted the complaint to Speaker Faustino “Bojie” G. Dy III in line with House rules. It must be included in the Order of Business within 10 session days and referred to the Committee on Justice within three session days after.

In contrast, the first three complaints against Duterte in December 2024 were archived until February 2025, when a fourth was filed by more than one-third of House members.

Several lawmakers doubt the complaint against Marcos will succeed, citing lack of evidence. Speaker Dy stated it "seems to have no merit," but the House will process it dutifully. If it fails after initiation, no further complaints can be entertained in the same year.

Consequently, the Makabayan bloc plans to endorse another citizen-filed complaint on January 22. Bayan President Renato Reyes said, "We expect that this verified complaint will be transmitted to the Speaker and included in the order of business, and not be excluded in favor of what many are saying is a weak first complaint intended to shield the President."

The early transmission, before Congress resumes on January 26, may advantage Marcos by potentially resolving the process quickly and blocking attempts until 2027.

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House Justice Committee votes 54-1 to advance impeachment complaints against VP Sara Duterte, gavel striking amid documents and vote tally.
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House Justice Committee finds Sara Duterte impeachment complaints sufficient in substance

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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.

The House justice committee proceeds with the first impeachment hearing against Vice President Sara Duterte on March 25, 2026, despite her and her lawyers' absence. The agenda includes ground rules, pending motions, subpoenas, and witnesses for the April 14 public hearing. Officials stress the proceedings are evidence-based from official audit findings.

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The House Committee on Justice began its first public hearing on the impeachment complaint against Vice President Sara Duterte on April 14, 2026. Key witnesses including Ramil Madriaga and officials from various agencies are expected to testify. The proceedings moved forward after the Supreme Court did not issue a temporary restraining order.

Lawmakers hit back at a Supreme Court petition by Vice President Sara Duterte's allies seeking to block her ongoing impeachment proceedings in the House of Representatives. The move comes after the House justice committee advanced two complaints to hearings.

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The House of Representatives transmitted the Articles of Impeachment against Vice President Sara Duterte to the Senate on May 13. The move came amid an alleged shooting incident inside the building and sets the stage for a Senate trial.

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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Vice President Sara Duterte has received an invitation from the House committee on justice to attend its March 25 hearing on impeachment complaints filed against her, her counsel confirmed. The invitation calls for her personal attendance at the Quezon City event. It remains unclear if she will attend.

 

 

 

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