Bongbong says he’s open to presidency
05/21/2010 Incoming Sen. Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. is now talking about becoming President after elections showed him to be one of the nation’s most popular politicians. Marcos said he had decided to step up to the Senate — after serving for nine years as Ilocos Norte governor and three as a House of Representatives member — purely to give ordinary Filipinos a voice on the national stage. “I really felt that I could help, I really felt that I had learned very much and I could bring those lessons to a national stage,” he told Agence France Presse. Marcos insisted that entering the Senate was not part of a well-orchestrated plan to run for the presidency in the next elections in 2016. “We don’t know what’s going to happen in the next six years so I think to plan for that is actually not even a practical thing to do, a wise thing to do. Because you have to watch and wait really,” he said. Nevertheless, he said that he did want to emulate his father by becoming president. “In the way that every foot soldier wants to be a general,” he said. Marcos also insists his family has nothing to apologize for in regards to his father and namesake’s 20-year rule of the country that ended in 1986 with a “people power” revolution and a humiliating escape into exile. “My father doesn’t need me to vindicate him,” a relaxed Marcos told AFP on Wednesday in his first major interview since last week’s national elections that saw him secure more than 13 million votes and a seat in the Senate. “What will vindicate my father will be the academics and the historians who will look back on his time in the cold light of day and see his administration for what it was.” To many, Ferdinand Marcos Sr.’s reign was dominated by widespread human rights abuses, the family stealing billions of dollars from state coffers and the wholesale slaughter of a fledgling democracy aimed at holding on to power. Source: The Daily Tribune URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/headlines/20100521hed5.html |
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