Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. rejects his sister’s accusation he uses cocaine

Senator Imee Marcos, Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.’s estranged sister, said his alleged cocaine dependence has led to problems in his governance, including corruption. (AFP)
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Updated 18 November 2025
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Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. rejects his sister’s accusation he uses cocaine

  • Senator Imee Marcos says her brother’s drug addiction started when their father, the namesake of the current leader, was still a president and has continued to this day

MANILA: Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.’s estranged sister, a senator, publicly accused him Monday of being a longtime drug addict whose alleged cocaine dependence has led to problems in his governance, including corruption, allegations that his spokesperson said was a recycled issue that has long been disproven.
Communications Undersecretary Claire Castro said Sen. Imee Marcos’ baseless accusations against her own brother may have been a desperate attempt to distract ongoing investigations into a corruption scandal involving flood control projects that may implicate her allies in the Senate.
“Sen. Imee, I hope you’ll be a patriot and help in the investigation that your own brother has been doing and condemn all the corrupt,” Castro said. “Don’t side with them, don’t hide them. Let President Marcos work to stop all the corruption.”
An independent fact-finding commission created by Marcos, a Senate committee and government agencies have been investigating allegations that influential members of Congress and the Senate have pocketed huge kickbacks from construction companies, which had won lucrative contracts to build flood-control projects, which turned out to be substandard, incomplete or nonexistent. The scandal has sparked outrage in an Asian country long prone to deadly flooding and typhoons.
The senator is a high-profile ally of her brother’s harsh critic and predecessor, Rodrigo Duterte.
Duterte was arrested on an International Criminal Court warrant in March and flown to and detained in the Netherlands for alleged crimes against humanity over his brutal anti-drug crackdowns that left thousands of mostly poor suspects dead. Duterte has denied any wrongdoing.
Duterte’s family and allies have blamed Marcos and his administration for what they claim was the ex-president’s illegal arrest and detention by the global court. His daughter, Vice President Sara Duterte, is also one of the most vocal critics of the current president but is a close ally of the senator.
In a speech Monday night before a huge rally by a religious group in a Manila park, the senator said that her brother’s drug addiction started when their father, the namesake of the current leader, was still a president and has continued to this day. She claimed it has affected his health and ability to govern.
The president and his elder sister were children of a then- dictator, who was ousted in an army-backed “people power” uprising in 1986.
She alleged that the president’s wife and children were also drug users and added that she and her brother mostly haven’t talked since he became president in 2022. Liza Marcos didn’t immediately comment but her son, Rep. Sandro Marcos, said her aunt’s accusations were baseless and “dangerously irresponsible.”
“It pains me to see how low she has gone to the point that she resorts to a web of lies aimed at destabilizing this government to advance her own political ambitions,” he said.
The senator said in her speech without offering any evidence that the president’s “addiction became the cause of the flood of corruption, the lack of direction and very wrong decisions, the absence of accountability and justice.”
Addressing the military, police and other officials, she said that they should help her “improve his condition,” adding “I’m not his enemy. His enemy is himself.”
Castro blasted the senator for not calling out Rodrigo Duterte, who has acknowledged using fentanyl in the past and his being linked, along with his daughter, the vice president, by critics to alleged corruption. Both Duterte and his daughter have denied involvement in corruption, including her alleged misuse of confidential funds.
Early last year, Rodrigo Duterte said in a speech that his successor was a drug addict, who was once on a law enforcement list of suspected drug users. Marcos then laughed off Duterte’s allegations and said he wouldn’t dignify the accusation with an answer, but claimed his predecessor was using fentanyl, a powerful opioid.
In 2016, Duterte said he had used fentanyl in the past to ease pain caused by injuries from a motorbike accident. His lawyer later said that Duterte has stopped taking fentanyl before he became president in 2016.
In 2021, when Marcos was a presidential aspirant, his spokesperson showed two reports from a private hospital and the national police laboratory that stated Marcos had tested negative for cocaine and methamphetamine.


UK leader Starmer fights for his job as Mandelson-Epstein revelations spark a leadership crisis

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UK leader Starmer fights for his job as Mandelson-Epstein revelations spark a leadership crisis

LONDON: British Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s position hung by a thread on Monday as he tried to persuade his Labour Party’s lawmakers not to kick him out of his job after just a year and a half in office.
Starmer lost his chief of staff on Sunday and is rapidly shedding support from Labour legislators after revelations about the relationship between former British ambassador to Washington Peter Mandelson and the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Starmer is due to address Labour lawmakers behind closed doors later Monday in an attempt to rebuild some of his shattered authority.
The political storm stems from Starmer’s decision in 2024 to appoint Mandelson to Britain’s most important diplomatic post, despite knowing he had ties to Epstein.
Starmer fired Mandelson in September after emails were published showing that he maintained a friendship with Epstein after the late financier’s 2008 conviction for sex offenses involving a minor. Critics say Starmer should have known better than to appoint Mandelson, 72, a contentious figure whose career has been studded with scandals over money or ethics.
A new trove of Epstein files released in the United States has brought more details about the relationship, and new pressure on Starmer.
Starmer apologized last week for “having believed Mandelson’s lies.”
He promised to release documentation related to Mandelson’s appointment, which the government says will show that Mandelson misled officials about his ties to Epstein.
Police are investigating Mandelson for potential misconduct in public office over documents suggesting he passed sensitive government information to Epstein a decade and a half ago. The offense carries a maximum sentence of life in prison. Mandelson has not been arrested or charged, and does not face any allegations of sexual misconduct.
Starmer’s chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney, took the fall for the decision by quitting on Sunday, saying that “I advised the prime minister to make that appointment and I take full responsibility for that advice.”
McSweeney has been Starmer’s most important aide since he became Labour leader in 2020, and is considered a key architect of Labour’s landslide July 2024 election victory. But some in the party blame him for a series of missteps since then.
Some Labour officials hope that his departure will buy the prime minister time to rebuild trust with the party and the country. Senior lawmaker Emily Thornberry said McSweeney had become a “divisive figure” and his departure brought the opportunity for a reset.
She said Starmer is “a good leader in that he is strong and clear. I think that he needs to step up a bit more than he has.”
Others say McSweeney’s departure leaves Starmer weak and isolated.
Opposition Conservative Party leader Kemi Badenoch said Starmer “has made bad decision after bad decision” and “his position now is untenable.”
Since winning office, Starmer has struggled to deliver promised economic growth, repair tattered public services and ease the cost of living. He pledged a return to honest government after 14 years of scandal-tarred Conservative rule, but has been beset by missteps and U-turns over welfare cuts and other unpopular policies.
Labour consistently lags behind the hard-right Reform UK party in opinion polls, and its failure to improve had sparked talk of a leadership challenge, even before the Mandelson revelations.
Under Britain’s parliamentary system, prime ministers can change without the need for a national election. If Starmer is challenged or resigns, it would trigger an election for the Labour leadership. The winner would become prime minister.
The Conservatives went through three prime ministers between national elections in 2019 and 2024. One, Liz Truss, lasted just 49 days in office.
Starmer was elected on a promise to end the political chaos that roiled the Conservatives’ final years in power. That proved easier said than done.
Labour lawmaker Clive Efford said Starmer’s critics should “be careful what you wish for.”
“I don’t think people took to the changes in prime minister when the Tories were in power,” he told the BBC. “It didn’t do them any good.”