The year 2025 will be remembered not for a single shock, but for a series of slow-breaking events that quietly redrew the countryโs political, moral, and environmental landscape.
From collapsing political alliances to deepening climate disruption, the stories that defined the year revealed a common pattern: institutions built on spectacle and obedience weakened, while those grounded in trust, accountability, and local action were put to the test.
Here are the stories that made the biggest impact in 2025โand why they will continue to shape the years ahead.
Politics: When unity collapsed
The MarcosโDuterte alliance finally broke
What began as whispers of tension hardened into open rupture in 2025. By yearโs end, impeachment threats, public accusations, and rival power plays made it clear: the MarcosโDuterte partnership that once projected stability was beyond repair.
Why it matters
The fallout reshuffled political alliances nationwide, forcing local officials and dynasties to pick sides. The breakdown also exposed how fragile elite โunityโ can be when it is driven more by convenience than shared governance.
Religious bloc voting meets its credibility crisis
Long seen as a decisive electoral force, the Iglesia ni Cristoโs bloc voting showed signs of fragmentation. In several races, endorsed candidates failed to secure expected margins, pointing to dissent among younger voters and growing political pluralism within congregations.
Why it matters
The episode raised questions about whether religious vote delivery can still function as a reliable political machine in an era of social media, economic precarity, and generational change.
Governance and democracy: The shrinking civic space
Red-tagging becomes institutional, not just rhetorical
In 2025, red-tagging evolved from public accusations into policy language, budget allocations, and official programs framed as โsecurityโ or โcounter-insurgency.โ
Why it matters
This normalization threatens long-term civic participation, as activists, journalists, and community leaders operate under increasing pressureโwithout the declaration of formal authoritarian rule.
Climate: The new normal arrives early
Storms no longer wait for typhoon season
Tropical storms striking in the first half of the year upended long-held assumptions about climate cycles. Communities were caught off guard, and disaster response systems struggled to adapt.
Why it matters
The disruption forces permanent changes in farming calendars, insurance systems, urban planning, and food securityโespecially in already vulnerable regions.
Climate action shifts to local governments
While national climate rhetoric remained lofty, the most effective responses came from municipalities that invested early in drainage systems, land-use planning, and climate-resilient livelihoods.
Why it matters
The year underscored a hard truth: climate survival increasingly depends on the capacityโand political willโof local governments.
Economy: Aid, inequality, and quiet recovery
Ayuda fatigue sets in
Audit findings and field reports exposed leakages, politicization, and inefficiencies in cash aid programs such as AKAP. Public trust in short-term assistance weakened.
Why it matters
The controversy reopened debates on whether the Philippines needs a shift toward universal social protection rather than discretionary aid tied to political patronage.
The continued dominance of oligarchy
Even as inflation eased, wealth recovery favored large corporations and entrenched elites. Wages lagged behind, and rural livelihoods struggled to rebound.
Why it matters
This uneven recovery risks fueling deeper social resentment and future political instability.
Peace and faith: A moral reckoning
Mindanao peace redefined
Peacebuilding efforts in 2025 increasingly focused on schools, local economies, and climate resilience rather than armed groups alone.
Why it matters
The shift reframed peace as a daily governance challengeโnot merely the absence of war.
The backlash against transactional Christianity
Programs that aligned religious leaders too closely with political power drew growing criticism from pastors and laypeople alike.
Why it matters
The pushback signaled a broader moral reckoning over faith, power, and integrity in poor and vulnerable communities.
The global context: Power beyond our shores
Trumpโs return reshapes the world order
By 2025, the implications of Donald Trumpโs return to the White House were clear: a retreat from liberal internationalism and a boost for strongman politics worldwide.
Why it matters
For countries like the Philippines, the shift weakens global human rights pressure and emboldens authoritarian styles of governance.
Journalism: Truth under pressure
Fact-checking moves to the frontlines
Disinformation was no longer episodicโit was structural.
Newsrooms that survived did so by investing heavily in verification and explainers.
Why it matters
Fact-checking emerged not as a supplement, but as a core journalistic function.
Community newsrooms gain trust
Regional and independent outlets, often operating with limited resources, proved more credible to local audiences than national megaphones.
Why it matters
The center of journalistic trust shifted closer to communities and lived experience.
Why 2025 will not fade
If there is one lesson from 2025, it is this: systems built on control and spectacle struggled, while those rooted in accountability, locality, and truth endured.
The consequences of this yearโs stories will shape elections, climate policy, faith communities, and public trust long after the headlines move on.





