EXPLAINER: Why Marcos Jr. Isnโ€™t Worried About His Falling Ratings

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President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.โ€™s approval ratings dipped toward the end of 2024, but Malacaรฑang says he remains unfazed.

Why?

Because the Palace believes the decline is tied to his decision to investigate anomalous flood control projectsโ€”a move officials insist is necessary, even if unpopular.

Hereโ€™s what you need to know:

What the survey says

According to Pulse Asiaโ€™s December 2024 survey, the president’s disapproval rating inched up to 48% from 44% in September while his approval rating is 34%, slight increase from 33%. Eighteen percent of the respondents were undecided.

This means nearly half of Filipinos expressed dissatisfaction with Marcosโ€™ performance as the year closed.

Why flood control projects are at the center

Palace press officer Claire Castro explained that the presidentโ€™s ratings may have dropped because of his push to investigate irregular flood control projects.

These projects are crucial for infrastructure and disaster preparedness.

Allegations of ghost projects and kickbacks have long plagued the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH). Marcos Jr. reportedly knew the probe would generate โ€œpolitical noiseโ€ and affect allies, but pressed on โ€œfor the good of the country.โ€

The Duterte comparison

Castro contrasted Marcosโ€™ move with the previous administration:

  • Former president Rodrigo Duterte enjoyed consistently high ratings.
  • In 2020, Duterte ordered an audit of DPWH projects, but critics say few cases were filed and no major personalities were held accountable.
  • Castro argued that high ratings did not translate into decisive action against corruption.

She also took aim at Vice President Sara Duterteโ€™s confidential funds, claiming investigations have stalled due to political allies blocking scrutiny.

What this means politically

Marcos Jr. is signaling that integrity trumps popularityโ€”at least in this case.

The Palace is framing the survey decline as a short-term cost of pursuing accountability. In contrast, Castro said, Duterte’s high ratings donโ€™t necessarily mean effective governance.

Bottom line

Marcos Jr.โ€™s approval ratings may have slipped. But Malacaรฑang insists the president is focused on cleaning up flood control projectsโ€”a sector notorious for corruption.

Whether this gamble pays off politically depends on whether investigations lead to real accountability.

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