Marcos's Life
Marcos's Life
Marcos's Life
Ferdinand Marcos, in full Ferdinand Derain Marcos, (born September 11, 1917, Serrate,
Philippines—died September 28, 1989, Honolulu, Hawaii, U.S.), Philippine lawyer and politician
who, as head of state from 1966 to 1986, established an authoritarian regime in the
Philippines that came under criticism for corruption and for its suppression of democratic
processes.
Marcos attended school in Manila and studied law in the late 1930s at the University of the
Philippines, near that city. Tried for the assassination in 1933 of a political opponent of his
politician father, Marcos was found guilty in November 1939. But he argued his case on appeal
to the Philippine Supreme Court and won acquittal a year later. He became a trial lawyer in
Manila. During World War II he was an officer with the Philippine armed forces. Marcos’s later
claims of having been a leader in the Filipino guerrilla resistance movement were a central
factor in his political success, but U.S. government archives revealed that he actually played
little or no part in anti-Japanese activities during 1942–45.
From 1946 to 1947 Marcos was a technical assistant to Manuel Roxas, the first president of
the independent Philippine republic. He was a member of the House of Representatives
(1949–59) and of the Senate (1959–65), serving as Senate president (1963–65). In 1965
Marcos, who was a prominent member of the Liberal Party founded by Roxas, broke with it
after failing to get his party’s nomination for president. He then ran as the Nationalist Party
candidate for president against the Liberal president, Diosdado Macapagal. The campaign was
expensive and bitter. Marcos won and was inaugurated as president on December 30, 1965. In
1969 he was reelected, becoming the first Philippine president to serve a second term. During
his first term he had made progress in agriculture, industry, and education. Yet his
administration was troubled by increasing student demonstrations and violent urban guerrilla
activities.
On September 21, 1972, Marcos imposed martial law on the Philippines. Holding that
communist and subversive forces had precipitated the crisis, he acted swiftly; opposition
politicians were jailed, and the armed forces became an arm of the regime. Opposed by
political leaders—notably Benigno Aquino, Jr., who was jailed and held in detention for almost
eight years—Marcos was also criticized by church leaders and others. In the provinces Maoist
communists (New People’s Army) and Muslim separatists (notably of the Moro National
Liberation Front) undertook guerrilla activities intended to bring down the central
government. Under martial law the president assumed extraordinary powers, including the
ability to suspend the writ of habeas corpus. Marcos announced the end of martial law in
January 1981, but he continued to rule in an authoritarian fashion under various constitutional
formats. He won election to the newly created post of president against token opposition in
June 1981.
Philippine and U.S. dignitaries—Philippine Foreign Minister Carlos P. Romulo, U.S. Ambassador
Richard W. Murphy, Philippine Pres. Ferdinand E. Marcos, Imelda Marcos, and U.S. Chairman
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff David C. Jones—attending a ceremony at Clark Air Base in central
Luzon, Philippines, 1979.
Philippine and U.S. dignitaries—Philippine Foreign Minister Carlos P. Romulo, U.S. Ambassador
Richard W. Murphy, Philippine Pres. Ferdinand E. Marcos, Imelda Marcos, and U.S. Chairman
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff David C. Jones—attending a ceremony at Clark Air Base in central
Luzon, Philippines, 1979.
Marcos’s wife from 1954 was Imelda Romualdez Marcos, a former beauty queen. Imelda
became a powerful figure after the institution of martial law in 1972. She was often criticized
for her appointments of relatives to lucrative governmental and industrial positions while she
held the posts of governor of Metropolitan Manila (1975–1986) and minister of human
settlements and ecology (1979–86).
Marcos’s later years in power were marred by rampant government corruption, economic
stagnation, the steady widening of economic inequalities between the rich and the poor, and
the steady growth of a communist guerrilla insurgency active in the rural areas of the
Philippines’ innumerable islands.
By 1983 Marcos’s health was beginning to fail, and opposition to his rule was growing. Hoping
to present an alternative to both Marcos and the increasingly powerful New People’s Army,
Benigno Aquino, Jr., returned to Manila on August 21, 1983, only to be shot dead as he
stepped off the airplane. The assassination was seen as the work of the government and
touched off massive antigovernment protests. An independent commission appointed by
Marcos concluded in 1984 that high military officers were responsible for Aquino’s
assassination. To reassert his mandate, Marcos called for presidential elections to be held in
1986. But a formidable political opponent soon emerged in Aquino’s widow, Corazon Aquino,
who became the presidential candidate of the opposition. It was widely asserted that Marcos
managed to defeat Aquino and retain the presidency in the election of February 7, 1986, only
through massive voting fraud on the part of his supporters. Deeply discredited at home and
abroad by his dubious electoral victory, Marcos held fast to his presidency as the Philippine
military split between supporters of his and of Aquino’s legitimate right to the presidency. A
tense standoff that ensued between the two sides ended only when Marcos fled the country
on February 25, 1986, at U.S. urging. He went into exile in Hawaii, where he remained until his
death.
Evidence emerged that during his years in power Marcos, his family, and his close associates
had looted the Philippines’ economy of billions of dollars through embezzlements and other
corrupt practices. Marcos and his wife were subsequently indicted by the U.S. government on
racketeering charges, but in 1990 (after Marcos’s death) Imelda was acquitted of all charges by
a federal court. She was allowed to return to the Philippines in 1991, and in 1993 a Philippine
court found her guilty of corruption (the conviction was overturned in 1998).
family backround
The Marcos family is a family in the Philippines. They have established themselves in the
country's politics having established a political dynasty that traces its beginnings to the 1925
election of Mariano Marcos to the Philippine House of Representatives as congressman for the
second district of Ilocos Norte; reached its peak during the 21-year reign of Ferdinand Marcos
as president of the Philippines that included the declaration of Martial Law throughout the
country and continues today with the political careers of Imelda Marcos, Imee Marcos, and
Ferdinand Marcos Jr.
Imee Marcos has attributed the continued reign of the Marcos family to the inherent
feudalism of Philippine culture. Although nominally democratic, Philippine society effectively
blocks individual Philippine citizens from having much political power, forcing them to be
dependent on powerful figures that social scientists have called "bosses" or "caciques."
Ferdinand Alexander Marcos III, the most politically prominent of the fourth generation of
Marcoses, has argued that political dynasties are simply a "natural progression" for members
of powerful families
Although Article II Section 26 of the current Philippine constitution, promulgated after the
Marcoses were ousted from the Philippines in 1986, explicitly prohibits the perpetuation of
Political dynasties, little legislation has been since been put in place to enforce the provision.
The prominence of the Marcos family in Philippine politics has been stopped twice. The first
came with the victory of Julio Nalundasan over Mariano Marcos and the subsequent arrest of
Ferdinand Marcos for his murder, the publicity for which brought Ferdinand Marcos to the
national consciousness and eventually led to his rise to power.The second, when Filipinos got
tired of the plundering and murder, was when the Marcos family was deposed from
Malacañang by the 1986 EDSA People Power Revolution and exiled to Hawaii. After Ferdinand
Marcos' 1989 death, the remaining members of the family were allowed to return to the
Philippince to face various corruption charges in 1992. However, they were able to return to
political power that same year, to the dismay of the filipino people, with the election of
Ferdinand Marcos Jr as congressman for the second district of Ilocos Norte.
At least one other branch of the family, that of Ferdinand Sr's sister Elizabeth Marcos-Keon, is
also in politics, with her son Michael Marcos Keon having been elected board member in 2004
and governor of Ilocos Norte in 2007.
Literary works
The church was founded in 1902 by Isabelo de los Reyes and a Roman Catholic priest named
Gregorio Aglipay who also became its first Supreme Bishop.
Members of this church reject the spiritual authority of the Pope as well as the doctrine of the
Trinity. They also denied the existence of angels, devils, miracles and other supernatural
manifestations.
3. He was a memory whiz but the claim that he got the “highest score
ever” in the bar exam is false.
Marcos was so smart he single-handedly topped the 1939 Bar Examinations (with near-perfect
score) despite being in jail for 27 days. Or so the viral photo above claims.
However, as confirmed by the Philippine Supreme Court, the distinction of having the highest
bar exam score in the country belongs to former associate justice Florenz Regalado who
scored an average of 96.7% in the 1954 bar exam. Marcos, on the other hand, indeed topped
the bar exam in his time but with a relatively lower average score of 92.35%.
Although it is nothing but fake news, we can’t deny that Marcos was one smart man.
Several people attested to Marcos’ incredible memory, including the late Senator Miriam
Defensor-Santiago who once served as Marcos’ speechwriter.
“One time, the Secretary of Justice forgot to tell me that the President had requested him to
draft a speech….” said Miriam during an interview with the Philippine Star.
“And then, on the day the President was to deliver the speech, he suddenly remembered
because Malacañang was asking for the speech, so he said, ‘This is an emergency. You just
have to produce something.’
…He (Marcos) liked long speeches. I think that was 20 or 25 pages. And then, in the evening, I
was there, of course. President Marcos recited the speech from memory.”
11. The ‘Omega 12′ was behind Ferdinand Marcos’ Martial Law.
The martial law was not a one-man endeavor. In fact, Marcos sought the help of his ’12
apostles,’ later known as the “Rolex 12” (named after the Rolex watches that Marcos gave to
them as gifts).
But according to a 1974 confidential memo of then US Ambassador to Manila William Sullivan,
Marcos gave the 12 military officers gold Omega watches, not Rolexes. Hence, the proper term
would have been “Omega 12.”
Before declaring the martial law in 1972, Marcos consulted with the Omega 12, and their plans
were contained in a confidential document called Oplan Sagittarius. Five members of the
group allegedly helped create the decrees of Proclamation 1081 before all 12 of them finalized
Marcos’ plan.
15. Ferdinand Marcos knew that the U.S. secretly stored nuclear
weapons in the country, but never told anyone.
File photos from Reuters (vehicle carrying missile) and AFP (Marcos).
This is according to a document released by the National Security Archive based in George
Washington University.
The said top-secret memo was from US career diplomat Robert McClintock. He informed then
acting secretary of the US State Department that the storage of nuclear weapons “would be
covered by executive privilege and not divulged to the Symington Subcommittee on overseas
commitments.”
The memo also suggests that the nuclear weapons have been stored in the country for many
years “without prior consultation with the Philippine Government.”
The document added: “The fact that President Marcos was secretly informed of the presence
of these weapons in 1966 would not work to his advantage in the elections. The Philippine
government and public are not aware of storage nor of President Marcos’ knowledge thereof.”
17. The bizarre life and ugly death of the man who challenged
Ferdinand Marcos.
Regarded by his followers as a holy man who could converse with Bathala and the spirits of
past Filipino heroes, Valentin Delos Santos was a perennial presidential candidate, having ran
first against Carlos Garcia in 1957, Diosdado Macapagal in 1961 and then against Ferdinand
Marcos in 1965 with the promise of achieving “true justice, true equality, and true freedom for
the country.”
However, his endeavor was met both with amusement and disdain by the public and his
political opponents who believed him to be a crazy old coot.
Two years after losing to Marcos, Delos Santos—then already in his 80s—led around 400 of his
followers who were dressed in strange blue uniforms with capes on a march from Taft Avenue
in Pasay to Malacañang Palace to demand the president’s resignation.
Delos Santos cited poverty, landlessness, and the country’s exploitation by Western powers as
his reasons why Marcos should resign.
When the chaos was over, 33 members of Lapiang Malaya and one soldier lay dead on the
street. Dozens more—members, soldiers, and civilians—also suffered gunshot or hack
wounds.
On August of the same year, Delos Santos met his end inside the center at the hands of his
schizophrenic cellmate. Mauled in his sleep, he slipped into a coma and was never revived.
The doctor of the facility later officially attributed his death to pneumonia.
18. Ferdinand Marcos’ last day in Malacañang.
Here’s a poignant portrait of a once-powerful family shortly after Marcos took his oath of
office as the reelected president on February 25, 1986.
For everyone outside the presidential palace, however, the victory was a sham and the
ceremony was just Marcos’ last-minute attempt to stay in power. True enough, it would be the
Marcoses’ last photograph together in Malacañang; a few hours later, they were forced to flee
into exile in Hawaii, marking the end of Marcos’ two decades of dictatorship.
The days leading to this momentous event were certainly the darkest in Marcos’ political
career. One by one, his military functionaries–including the Air Force pilots–defected to the
rebel camp of Juan Ponce Enrile and Fidel Ramos.
Such was his desperation that he called U.S. Sen. Paul Laxalt, one of the observers in the
February 7 snap elections, to ask whether he should step down or not, and to which the
American lawmaker replied:
“I think you should cut. And cut cleanly. The time has come.”