Opposition urges Sara Duterte to resign for ‘meddling’

Leading opposition figures have joined the calls for Vice President Sara Duterte to resign from President Marcos’ Cabinet if she plans on continuing to get involved in affairs that were beyond the mandates of her office. Among them were former Sen. Leila de Lima and former Office of the Vice President spokesperson and lawyer Barry Gutierrez, who criticized Duterte for “meddling” into issues that were beyond her responsibilities as education secretary. These include the ongoing debate on whether the Philippine government should cooperate with the International Criminal Court (ICC), as well as President Marcos’ decision to reach out again to the Communist rebels to revive the peace talks that stalled under her father and former President Rodrigo Duterte. In the ICC’s case, Duterte had urged Congress against considering pending resolutions calling for cooperation in the ongoing ICC investigation into the drug war. She and her father are believed to be among those who could eventually face charges for their alleged role in extrajudicial killings committed by the so-called “Davao Death Squad” during their time as mayor and vice mayor of Davao City from 2011 to 2016. ‘Troubling patterns’ As for the peace talks, Duterte personally appealed to Mr. Marcos not to enter into “an agreement with the devil” and to use his executive powers to review and reconsider the Oslo Joint Statement signed by the government and the National Democratic Front of the Philippines. Gutierrez also flagged Duterte’s habit of cozying up to China, such as sending a congratulatory video message wishing for stronger Manila-Beijing bilateral relations during its National Day last Oct. 1. “These are all troubling patterns,” he said. “It’s normal for politicians to give their own two cents into issues, but the extent of Vice President Duterte’s involvement in issues outside her primary function raises questions about her focus and priorities as Secretary of Education.” Duterte’s supposed lack of focus came into sharp contrast after the latest Programme for International Student Assessment report showed that Filipino students were still among the lowest scorers in the world in terms of reading, mathematics, and science skills. The same study, published on Tuesday covering 690,000 students from 81 countries, also showed that the Philippines’ performance in the three subjects “were about the same” as in 2018, when it first took part in the assessment. These results, Gutierrez said, compounded the “overlapping crisis besetting the education sector in the country, from