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Philippine Nobel winner Ressa calls Facebook ‘biased against facts’

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By Karen Lema, October 9, 2021

MANILA, Oct 9 (Reuters) – Nobel Peace Prize winner Maria Ressa used her new prominence to criticise Facebook as a threat to democracy, saying the social media giant fails to protect against the spread of hate and disinformation and is “biased against facts”.

The veteran journalist and head of Philippine news site Rappler told Reuters in an interview after winning the award that Facebook’s algorithms “prioritise the spread of lies laced with anger and hate over facts.”

Her comments add to the pile of recent pressure on Facebook, used by more than 3 billion people, which a former employee turned whistleblower accused of putting profit over the need to curb hate speech and misinformation. Facebook denies any wrongdoing.

Sought for comment on Ressa’s remarks, a Facebook spokesperson said the social media giant continues to invest heavily to remove and reduce the visibility of harmful content.

“We believe in press freedom and support news organisations and journalists around the world as they continue their important work,” the spokesperson added.

Ressa shared the Nobel with Russian journalist Dmitry Muratov on Friday, for what the committee called braving the wrath of the leaders of the Philippines and Russia to expose corruption and misrule, in an endorsement of free speech under fire worldwide.

Facebook has become the world’s largest distributor of news and “yet it is biased against facts, it is biased against journalism,” Ressa said.

“If you have no facts, you can’t have truths, you can’t’ have trust. If you don’t have any of these, you don’t have a democracy,” she said. “Beyond that, if you don’t have facts, you don’t’ have a shared reality, so you can’t solve the existential problems of climate, coronavirus.”

Ressa has been the target of intense social-media hatred campaigns from President Rodrigo Duterte’s supporters, which she said were aimed at destroying her and Rappler’s credibility.

ELECTION ‘A BATTLE FOR FACTS’

“These online attacks on social media have a purpose, they are targeted, they are used like a weapon,” said the former CNN journalist.

Rappler’s reporting has included close scrutiny of Duterte’s deadly war on drugs and a series of investigative reports into what it says is his government’s strategy to “weaponise” the internet, using bloggers on its payroll to stir up anger among online supporters who threaten and discredit Duterte’s critics.

Duterte has not commented on Ressa’s award. The presidential palace, Duterte’s spokesperson, his chief legal counsel, and communications office did not respond to Reuters requests for comment.

Facebook in March 2019 removed an online network in the Philippines for “coordinated inauthentic behaviour”, and linked it to a businessman who has previously said he helped manage the president’s social media election campaign in 2016.

Filipinos top the world in time spent on social media, according to 2021 studies by social media management firms.

Platforms like Facebook have become political battlegrounds and have helped strengthen Duterte’s support base, having been instrumental in his election victory in 2016 and a rout by his allies in mid-term polls last year.

The Philippines will hold an election in May to choose a successor to Duterte, who under the constitution is not allowed to seek another term.

That campaign “will be a battle for facts,” Ressa said. “We are going to keep making sure our public sees the facts, understands it. We are not going to be harassed or intimidated into silence.”Reporting by Karen Lema; Additional Reporting by Neil Jerome Morales; editing by William Mallard and Jason Neely

Bleak house: Why Europe faces steep winter energy bills

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Reuters.Com

LONDON, Oct 8 (Reuters) – Households across Europe face much higher winter energy bills due to a global surge in wholesale power and gas prices and consumer groups have warned the most vulnerable in the region could be hit by fuel poverty as a result.

WHY THE HIGH PRICES?

Energy companies pay a wholesale price to buy gas and electricity, which they then sell to consumers. As in any market, this can go up or down, driven by supply and demand.

Prices typically rise in response to more demand for heating and people turning lights on earlier in winter, while those in the summer period are usually lower.

But prices have sky-rocketed due to low gas storage stocks, high European Union carbon prices, low liquefied natural gas tanker deliveries due to higher demand from Asia, less gas supplies from Russia than usual, low renewable output and infrastructure outages.

Benchmark European gas prices at the Dutch TTF hub have risen by more than 400% since January, while benchmark German and French power contracts have more than doubled.

HOW LONG COULD THIS LAST?

Europe’s winter heating season typically begins in October and wholesale prices are not forecast to fall significantly during the remainder of this year, despite promises from some suppliers of more gas.

Many analysts expect prices to remain elevated next year.

Russia, Europe’s largest gas supplier, said this week that the certification of the Nord Stream 2 undersea gas pipeline from Russia to Germany, which expects clearance from a German regulator, could cool soaring European gas prices.

The regulator, which said in September it had four months to complete certification, said it could not rule out that Nord Stream 2 operations could start soon, adding that all technical requirements had been met. read moreBut Gazprom’s ability to supply more volumes to Europe could be limited this winter as it is still filling its own domestic gas storages and already producing close to a 10-year high, said analysts at Bank of America.

Last month, Norway’s Equninor EQNR.OL, Europe’s second largest supplier, said it would increase natural gas exports to Europe. Norway supplies just under a third of Britain’s gas.

WHY RETAIL PRICE RISES?

Many energy suppliers announced hikes to retail tariffs in recent months, passing a higher wholesale cost on to consumers.

Wholesale costs can make up a large chunk of a bill. In Britain, for example, on a dual fuel bill (electricity and gas), the wholesale cost can account for 40% of the total.

So when wholesale market prices rise significantly, suppliers can hike consumer retail tariffs.

Suppliers can buy energy in the wholesale market on the day of delivery, a day ahead and up to months or seasons in advance.

They have to try and predict when the price will be cheaper and buy the right amount to cover their customer needs.

If suppliers do not buy enough energy, they might have to buy more at a price which could be higher, depending on market movements. This year, prices have kept on climbing all summer.

CAN ANYONE INTERVENE?

European Energy Commissioner Kadri Simson has said she would soon present a plan to overhaul the EU gas market.

One of the ideas, proposed by Spain, is for the EU to buy gas jointly to take advantage of the power of its single market of 450 million consumers and create a strategic EU gas reserve but details are scant on how that would work

Some national governments have announced measures to try and ease the winter burden on households, such as subsidies, price caps or redirecting energy company profits to consumers. Britain, which relies heavily on gas for heating, introduced a price cap on the most widely used energy tariffs in 2019 aimed at ending what former Prime Minister Theresa May called “rip-off” pricing.

However, Britain’s energy regulator Ofgem has raised the cap on the most widely used tariffs, called standard variable tariffs, by 12-13% from October. It said on Friday it expects a “significant” rise of the cap again next April.

Proposals for UK government intervention have included state loans and the creation of a “bad bank” to support energy suppliers, as well as a windfall tax to help ease the burden on household bills.

“It is, however, unclear how any of such proposals could be implemented and what their impact on the industry would be,” said Moody’s Investor Service.

WHAT CAN CONSUMERS DO?

Due to a deregulated market, Britain has had some of the biggest choice in energy suppliers for consumers.

In a market of now around 40 suppliers, smaller firms have less capital to hedge their wholesale power purchases against soaring prices and nine firms serving over 1.7 million customers, or 6% of the market, have ceased trading since the beginning of September.

Consumers are usually encouraged to switch providers or to a cheaper tariff.

However, consumer groups in Britain now say standard variable tariffs, subject to the price cap, are among the cheapest as smaller suppliers fail and there are no longer cheaper deals available.

“But the cap level isn’t the maximum anyone will pay. The price cap sets a limit on the rates you pay for each unit of gas and electricity, so if you use more, you’ll pay more,” said Andrew Capstick, energy analyst at price comarison website moneysupermarket.com

Regulators such as Britain’s Ofgem urge consumers to contact their energy provider if they are struggling to pay their bills to explain when and how much can be paid.

Energy efficiency measures, such as improved insulation, energy efficient lighting and smart meters are also advised, but could require upfront costs. Reducing energy usage is much easier in the summer months.Reporting by Nina Chestney; Editing by Carmel Crimmins

Why is Malacañang silent over Maria Ressa’s historic Nobel Prize? Netizens offer answers

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Oct 9, 2021, Gaby Baizas

MANILA, Philippines

‘After years of trying to silence Maria Ressa, it is Duterte who has been silenced by her Nobel Peace Prize,’ says Gideon Lasco

Congratulatory messages poured in for Rappler CEO Maria Ressa following her historic Nobel Peace Prize win announced on Friday, October 8 – a feat that has made many Filipinos at home and abroad brim with pride.

Ressa became the first Filipino to win the Nobel Peace Prize. She won alongside Russian journalist Dmitry Muratov. This year’s Nobel Peace Prize is also the first for journalists since Germany’s Carl von Ossietzky won it in 1935 for revealing his country’s secret post-war rearmament program. (What you need to know: Filipinos and the Nobel Peace Prize)

Netizens observed that Malacañang had been quick to congratulate Filipinos who have done the country proud in international events, like Hidilyn Diaz who won the country’s first Olympic gold in Tokyo. In the case of Ressa, however, no Duterte government official had said anything about her historic feat a day after the announcement, and counting.

Ressa and Muratov’s win comes at a time when journalists are persecuted in many parts of the world, incuding in their countries. Ressa, one of Rappler’s co-founders, has endured harassment from the Duterte administration.

The Nobel Committee highlighted Ressa and Rappler’s work on the “controversial, murderous anti-drug campaign” under President Rodrigo Duterte, as well as the weaponization of social media to “spread fake news, harass opponents and manipulate public discourse.” `

Duterte, who is on Reporters Without Borders’ list of “press freedom predators” in 2021, has repeatedly attacked Rappler and its journalists, as well as other news organizations such as ABS-CBN.

Muratov is one of the founders and the editor-in-chief of the independent newspaper Novaja Gazeta, which the Nobel Committee called “the most independent newspaper in Russia.” The Kremlin was quick to congratulate Muratov even if his newspaper has often criticized Russian authorities.

Vice President Leni Robredo, some lawmakers, and various groups and institutions already lauded Ressa and Muratov. World leaders including US President Joe Biden extended their congratulations as well. Even the Dalai Lama sent his congratulations to the two, saying that “journalists have a key role to play in promoting human values and a sense of social and religious harmony.”

Will the Duterte government say anything at all about the victory of Ressa, who had been on the receiving end of the President’s tirades? Here are some of the observations of netizens on Malacañang’s radio silence over the historic moment.

Others highlighted how Ressa won the country’s first Nobel Peace Prize “in the time of Duterte,” a jab at allies and supporters who previously credited the President for Hidilyn Diaz’s historic Olympics victory.

Meanwhile, many Filipinos also regarded Ressa’s win – especially amid a looming International Criminal Court investigation into the Philippine drug war – as a sign of better things to come and an “international rebuke” of the injustices under the Duterte regime. This is also another possible reason for the Duterte administration’s silence.

Rappler.com

ICC prosecutor vows to uncover truth in Duterte ‘war on drugs’

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Kristine Joy Patag – Philstar.com, October 8, 2021

MANILA, Philippines — In the face of Philippine government officials insisting on non-cooperation with international probers, International Criminal Court Prosecutor Karim Khan vowed to uncover the truth in President Rodrigo Duterte’s bloody “war on drugs.”

In a statement late Thursday night (Manila time), Khan issued a statement weeks after the ICC’s Pre-Trial Chamber approved his office’s request to launch an investigation into allegations of crimes against humanity in the Philippines.

“My investigation will seek to uncover the truth and aim to ensure accountability. We will focus our efforts on ensuring a successful, independent and impartial investigation,” Khan said.

Khan also asserted that, as affirmed by the Pre-Trial Chamber, his office’s investigation will cover alleged crimes in the country from November 2011 to March 2019, when the Philippines’ withdrawal took effect.

The probe will also cover alleged killings in Davao City between 2011 and 2016, when he was in the local government of the southern Philippine city. 

The Duterte government has been adamant about insisting that the ICC has no jurisdiction over the country. Officials have also maintained that they will not cooperate with international probers.

But Khan said that his office remains” willing to constructively engage with national authorities in accordance with the principle of complementarity and our obligations under the Statute,”

The ICC prosecutor also said he will count on the cooperation of States Parties, civil society and other partners so it may give justice to victims and affected communities.

Khan added: “I equally look forward to exploring opportunities for greater engagement and dialogue between my Office and the Asia-Pacific region.”

RELATED: After announcing retirement from politics, Duterte says he will prepare defense for ICC probe

Difficulties in investigation

Retired ICC Judge Raul Pangalangan earlier said that the international tribunal can employ alternative ways to gather evidence in its investigation.

Social media posts may be used, and the ICC may also fly witnesses to The Hague. Online mechanisms can be used too if the investigator cannot physically come to the country.

Even before the PTC approved the request of the ICC’s Office of the Prosecutor for a full investigation, witnesses as well as kin of “drug war” victims have also been submitting their testimonies to the tribunal.

The OTP, in what has been called former Prosecutor Fatou Bensounda’s valedictory, noted that the office is “[a]ware of the complex operational challenges” that they will face if their request for the probe is approved.

“[W]e have also been taking a number of measures to collect and preserve evidence, in anticipation of a possible investigation,” she added.

Rappler’s Maria Ressa, Dmitry Muratov win 2021 Nobel Peace Prize

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Oct 8, 2021l, Rappler.com

Manila, Philippines

They win ‘for their efforts to safeguard freedom of expression, which is a precondition for democracy and lasting peace’

Rappler CEO Maria Ressa and Russian journalist Dmitry Muratov were awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for 2021 on Friday, October 8, in an unprecedented recognition of journalism’s role in today’s world.

They won the prize “for their efforts to safeguard freedom of expression, which is a precondition for democracy and lasting peace.”

Ressa has been the target of attacks for her media organization’s critical coverage of President Rodrigo Duterte’s administration and a key leader in the global fight against disinformation.

This is the first Nobel Prize for a Filipino. In 2007, the Nobel Peace Prize went to former US Vice President Al Gore and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a team of climate scientists which included former Ateneo president Fr Jett Villarin.

The award-giving body also acknowledged Muratov, one of the founders of the independent newspaper Novaja Gazeta, for his decades of defending “freedom of speech in Russia under increasingly challenging conditions.”

The Norwegian Nobel Committee said the newspaper is “the most independent newspaper in Russia,” publishing critical articles on “corruption, police violence, unlawful arrests, electoral fraud and ‘troll factories,’ to the use of Russian military forces both within and outside Russia.”

“Free, independent and fact-based journalism serves to protect against abuse of power, lies and war propaganda,” the committee said in a press release.

“The Norwegian Nobel Committee is convinced that freedom of expression and freedom of information help to ensure an informed public. These rights are crucial prerequisites for democracy and protect against war and conflict. The award of the Nobel Peace Prize to Maria Ressa and Dmitry Muratov is intended to underscore the importance of protecting and defending these fundamental rights.”

Ressa and Muratov are the latest journalists to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, the world’s most prestigious political accolade.

In February, Norwegian labor leader and parliamentary representative Jonas Gahr Støre nominated Ressa, Reporters Without Borders, and the Committee to Protect Journalists for the 2021 Prize.

“She is thus both a symbol and a representative of thousands of journalists around the world. The nomination fulfills key aspects of what is emphasized as peace-promoting in Alfred Nobel’s will. A free and independent press can inform about and help to limit and stop a development that leads to armed conflict and war,” Støre said in his nomination.

Skei Grande, former leader of Norway’s Liberal Party, also nominated the International Fact-Checking Network (IFCN) at the Poynter Institute for the Nobel Peace Prize.

Rappler is one of the two verified signatories of IFCN’s Code of Principles in the Philippines – the other being Vera Files.

Under attack

The attacks against Ressa and Rappler have reached the world stage. When Duterte assumed office in 2016 and launched his signature bloody drug war, Rappler cast a harsh light on the extrajudicial killings the President himself encouraged.

In June 2020, Ressa and former researcher Reynaldo Santos Jr. were convicted of cyber libel – a judgment Rappler regards as a failure of justice and democracy. Ressa and Santos are out on bail, and have filed their appeal with the Court of Appeals.

This is one of at least seven active cases pending in court against Rappler as of August 10, 2021.

Award-winning documentary A Thousand Cuts, released in 2020 by Filipino-American filmmaker Ramona Diaz, outlines Rappler’s journey and the fight for press freedom in the country.

Among other numerous awards in her decades of working in journalism, Ressa was named Time Magazine’s 2018 Person of the Year.

Before founding Rappler, she focused on investigating terrorism in Southeast Asia as she reported for CNN’s Manila and Jakarta bureaus. – Rappler.com

‘We stand on different grounds’ ‘We’re the real opposition,’ says Robredo on splitting votes with Isko Moreno

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By: Gabriel Pabico Lalu – Reporter / INQUIRER.net / October 08, 2021

MANILA, Philippines — Vice President Leni Robredo is no longer concerned that she and Manila Mayor Isko Moreno would split the opposition vote in the 2022 presidential race, saying her group has always been the “real opposition” even from the start.

Robredo was asked about possibly getting low votes due to the sheer number of candidates for the upcoming polls, to which she admitted being concerned initially.

But then she said that since they were standing on different grounds, they would also have different backgrounds and support bases — which for Robredo, is the opposition side.

“Alam mo to be very honest about it, ‘yon ‘yong una kong paniniwala.  But I had a number of talks with a lot of them, and ‘yong na-realize ko, marami kasi kaming points na hindi kami aligned, na ito ‘yong mga basic na paniniwala, na mahirap i-pilit ‘yong unity kung sa mga basic na prinsipyo hindi kayo nagkakaisa,” she said during her briefing on Friday.

“So ‘yong sa akin, hindi na ako gano’n ka-concern ngayon than when I was first starting, kasi lumalabas naman kasi ngayon kami talaga ‘yong oposisyon, wala namang lumalabas na kapareho namin in the sense na mula umpisa nakipaglaban talaga,” she added.

Asked if she thought this would be the same scenario between her and Moreno, she said that the two of them stand on different grounds.

Robredo then revealed that there were key contradicting points between the two of them, which eventually led to the failure of the unity talks.

“I don’t believe so. After all the talks that we did, ang paniniwala ko iba ‘yong base namin, ‘yong sa akin — para sa akin klaro kung saan ako naka-posisyon, ito ‘yong paniniwala ko about governance, ito ‘yong paniniwala ko about ‘yong aspiration ko para sa bansa, ito ‘yong paniniwala ko na papaano ko dadalhin ‘yong bansa papunta do’n sa aspiration na ‘yon,” Robredo said.

“And during sa talks and even sa mga pronouncements, meron kaming basic differences pagdating doon.  So I don’t think pareho ‘yong aming voting bloc,” she added.

When pressed to discuss what were the talking points between him and Moreno, Robredo declined out of respect for the candidates she approached.

Despite the talks failing, she maintained that she has great respect for the people she talked with, noting that she would have not invited them to discuss if she did not respect them.

“Ayaw kong pag-usapan ‘yong detalye ng unity talks in deference to them.  Ako I have great respect for all the people I’ve talked to, kasi kung wala naman hindi ko naman sila pupuntahan. Pero sa akin I think hindi rin tama na binibigay ko ‘yong detalye no’ng aming mga usapan,” she explained.

Robredo on Thursday announced her candidacy for president, ending months of speculations on whether she would run.

Aside from Moreno, Robredo’s decision to run for presidency will pit her against former senator Bongbong Marcos, Senators Panfilo Lacson and Manny Pacquiao, and labor leader Leody de Guzman.

She had earlier engaged in so-called “unity talks” with other candidates to ensure a solid vote against President Rodrigo Duterte’s “anointed one,” and the return of the Marcos family to Malacañang.

After declaring her intention to run, the hashtag #WithdrawIsko trended on microblogging site Twitter, as opposition supporters urged the two of them to run together.

Pinoys in Europe urge UN to press investigations into Duterte’s human rights violations

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October 7, 2021/

Report and photo by Rex Culao

GENEVA, Switzerland—Filipinos in Europe held a rally at the United Nations (UN) headquarters in this city to press for an international investigation into harassments against human rights defenders and critics of the Rodrigo Duterte government in the Philippines.

Geneva Forum as well as Europe-based chapters of Migrante, Anakbayan and Gabriela gathered at the city center last Wednesday, October 6, as the 48th Regular Session of the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) was ongoing.

The groups said they also support the investigation by the International Criminal Court on the state of human rights in the Philippines.

“Activists have been killed over the last year, both by the security forces and by unknown individuals. In many instances, activists were killed after being red-tagged. In virtually none of the cases has anyone been held accountable for the killings,” the groups in a statement said.

The organizations urged the UNHRC to establish mechanisms that would address rights violations in the Philippines.

“We appeal to International organizations and community to help us put an immediate stop to the criminalization and attacks against activists, lawyers and journalists, which has continued over the year, with impunity, despite the fact that the UNHRC has adopted the resolution extending technical assistance and capacity-building to the Philippine government,” the protesters said.

In his speech, Fr. Angel Cortez of Franciscan International noted that the proposed investigation by the UNHRC on the state of human rights in the Philippines has yet to fully proceed.

“As a Filipino, I want to raise a voice and bring the voice of our people on the present situation in Duterte’s administration that until now there’s no independent investigation mandated by the UNHRC and the killings is go on amid the [coronavirus] pandemic.”

President Duterte said UNHRC and ICC investigations are unwanted interventions into internal matters and have threatened to slap and arrest international investigators who dare come into the Philippines.

During the rally, the protesters also expressed support to international rights institutions such as CIVICUS Monitor and Investigate PH that demanded accountability for the perpetrators of rights violations in the Philippines.

In a recent country research brief, CIVICUS Monitor said that “serious civic freedoms violations continue to occur, creating a chilling effect within civil society” a year after the UNHRCs adoption of a resolution that pointed out extrajudicial killings and political repression in the Philippines.

CIVICUS Monitor said the resolution is “profoundly weak” if it does not investigate violations in the Philippines as recommended by UN High Commissioner on Human Rights Michelle Bachelet in 2020. # (Kodao.org)

‘Buong-buo ang loob ko’: Robredo to run for president in 2022

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By: Gabriel Pabico Lalu – Reporter/INQUIRER.net /October 07, 2021

MANILA, Philippines — After months of anticipation and with just a day left in the filing of certificates of candidacy, Vice President Leni Robredo on Thursday finally announced that she is running for the presidency in the 2022 national elections.

Robredo said during her speech at her office in the Quezon City Reception House that she is now ready to fight it out in the upcoming polls, even if she will face an uphill battle just to end the people’s sufferings.

“Naniniwala ako ang pag-ibig nasusukat hindi lang sa pagtitiis, kundi sa kahandaang lumaban, kahit gaano kahirap, para matapos na ang pagtitiis. Ang nagmamahal, kailangangang ipaglaban ang minamahal,” Robredo said.

“Buong-buo ang loob ko ngayon. Kailangan nating palayain ang ating sarili mula sa kasalukuyang sitwasyon. Lalaban ako, lalaban tayo, inihahain ko ang aking sarili bilang kandidato sa pagka-pangulo sa halalan ng 2022,” she added.

In measured tones, Robredo said the country would be at a disadvantage if people with personalities similar to the present kind of governance will win in the 2022 national elections.

“Malinaw sa lahat ang hamon na kinakaharap natin, nakita na nating lahat ang pagsisinungaling at panggigipit na kayang gawin ng iba para maabot ang mga layunin nila. Nasa kanila ang pera, makinarya, isang buong istrukturang kayang magpalaganap ng anumang kwentong gusto nilang palabasin,” she further said.

“Pero hindi kayang tabunan ng kahit anumang ingay ang katotohanan. Kung parehong uri ng pamamahala at pareho ang pagkatao ng mga magwawagi sa araw ng halalan, wala tayong aasahang pagbabago. Dito tayo po-posisyon,” she claimed.

Robredo announced her decision during a briefing in her office at the Quezon City Reception House.

Her announcement ended months of speculation about whether she would run for president, pursue a local post, or retire from politics.  This also meant that Robredo is now accepting the nomination of opposition coalition 1Sambayan to be its presidential bet for the upcoming polls.

Robredo was pushing for a united opposition slate for the 2022 national elections, hence the late decision to enter the presidential race. Prior to the filing of certificates of candidacy, she sat down and talked with other possible candidates including Manila Mayor Isko Moreno, Senators Panfilo Lacson, and Senator Manny Pacquiao.

But it appears that the talks failed as all have expressed their intent to run for the presidency, with all three having already filed their own COCs.