Audio By Carbonatix
The Philippine House of Representatives has voted to impeach Vice-President Sara Duterte for a second time, threatening her plan to run for president in 2028.
Monday's vote moves the impeachment process to the Senate for trial, where if convicted, the daughter of former President Rodrigo Duterte will be disqualified from holding public office.
The 47-year-old is leading early surveys to replace her ally-turned-bitter foe, President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.
The case against the vice-president stemmed from her alleged misuse of public funds and public threats against Marcos, his wife and his cousin, the former House speaker.
Duterte was impeached on the same grounds in 2025, but the Supreme Court blocked it on a technicality before the Senate trial could start.
The case was revived this year. Last week, a House committee that looked into the evidence against the vice-president ruled that there was sufficient grounds to impeach her.
Duterte described the case as "nothing more than a scrap of paper" in a formal written response. She refused to appear in the committee hearings which she said had been politically motivated.
After the impeachment vote on Monday, Duterte's defence counsel said in a statement that "the burden now rests on the accusers to substantiate their claims" according to the law.
What comes next?
Monday night's impeachment vote served as a barometer of Marcos' support in the House. 255 of the 290 lawmakers in attendance voted to impeach Duterte, more than the one-thirds required to advance the case to trial.
But unlike in the House, a conviction in the Senate is uncertain, if a trial does start and runs its course.
In Philippine politics that is dominated by patronage and dynastic alliances, House members, who are elected per legislative district are friendlier to the incumbent president, compared to senators.
The country's 24 senators are elected on the national level and the Senate is a traditional springboard for those hoping to run for president or vice-president in the future.
In the 2025 mid-term vote, where half of the Senate was elected, candidates allied with Duterte fared better than those who ran under Marcos' coalition.
But the outcome of an impeachment vote will be difficult to predict under the country's multi-party system with shifting alliances.

Duterte announced her intention to run for president in February, much earlier than expected. Marcos is limited by the constitution to a single six-year term.
She holds a 17-point lead over her nearest rival based on a survey in March by Manila pollster WR Numero.
In the 2022 elections, Duterte was the survey frontrunner to succeed her father, but she formed an alliance with Marcos and ran for vice-president instead to consolidate their support bases and fend off a reformist wave. The pair won by a landslide.
But the alliance soon unravelled as they pursued divergent political agendas.
Marcos' allies in the House, led by cousin, then speaker Martin Romualdez, investigated allegations of fund misuse in Duterte's office.
At the height of public scrutiny, Duterte hosted a late night online press conference, where she said she told one person that "if I get killed, go kill BBM [President Marcos], [First Lady] Liza Araneta, and [House Speaker] Martin Romualdez".
Then in March last year, Marcos allowed the International Criminal Court to arrest Rodrigo Duterte and detain him at The Hague, where he now awaits trial for crimes against humanity over the hundreds who died in his so-called war on drugs.
Latest Stories
-
Ghana nominates Dr Sylvia Adusu for election to ITLOS
2 minutes -
Word champions shine at maiden Junior Journal Spelling Bee Competition
3 minutes -
Agric Minister demands 10% budget allocation for agriculture in Africa
3 minutes -
Africa must gain more from billion-dollar cocoa-chocolate industry—Agric Minister
5 minutes -
KNUST-German Partnership advances innovative solutions to textile and plastic waste
8 minutes -
Agriculture can eliminate youth unemployment in Africa—Agric Minister
12 minutes -
Golf is the Ultimate Meritocracy
12 minutes -
Minority demands original 2024 Anti-LGBTQ+ Bill be sent to Mahama for assent
18 minutes -
Muslim coalition sounds alarm over loopholes in new anti-LGBTQI+ billÂ
30 minutes -
Maritime development key to Africa’s economic transformation – GEXIM
49 minutes -
CSOs push for electoral reforms, propose new law on campaign financing
60 minutes -
Nigeria celebrates historic seven-medal haul in Bamako
60 minutes -
SIC Insurance posts GH¢84m profit as revenue rises, but audit flags subsidiary liabilities
1 hour -
Afreximbank invites Rugby Africa President Herbert Mensah to address the 33rd Annual Meetings on a Panel Exploring Sport as a driver of African Industrialisation
1 hour -
From the classroom to the home: How one day in Bulingin is changing healthy habits for good
1 hour