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Re-rise of the Marcos? Son of late Philippine dictator Ferdinand Marcos will run for vice-president

Senator Ferdinand 'Bongbong' Marcos Jr. who will run in next year's elections says he puts his 'political fortune in the hands of the Filipino people'

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Senator Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. asked Filipinos to judge him based on his 26-year career in government as a provincial official and national lawmaker. Photo: EPA

The son of late Philippine dictator Ferdinand Marcos announced on Monday that he would  run for vice-president in next year’s elections in a new gauge of his family’s political clout nearly three decades after they were ousted in a “people power” revolt.

Senator Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. asked Filipinos in a statement to judge him based on his 26-year career in government as a provincial official and national lawmaker.

Marcos, 58, did not touch on allegations of massive corruption and widespread rights violations against his father in a country which still marks the anniversary each year of the Marcoses’ 1986 ouster as a triumph of democracy.

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“I have decided to put my political fortune in the hands of the Filipino people,” he said.

Marcos railed against the “politics of personality” that he said has turned the Philippines into “a soft state where the rich become richer, the poor become poorer, graft and corruption is endemic ... injustice is the norm.”

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Renato Reyes of the left-wing group Bayan said Marcos should acknowledge the abuses that were committed during his father’s rule.

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