OPINION

So it begins

Marcos has already been written off by some pundits as ineffectual or a lame duck.

Barry Gutierrez

We are barely into 2026, and yet the shadow of 2028 is already stretching across our politics. That is not surprising. With just two and a half years to go before the next presidential election, alignments are starting to shift, the ambitious are starting to test the waters, and speculation is filling the vacuum created by uncertainty. 

What is striking this time around is just how chaotic the landscape looks. There is no clear path, no dominant narrative, and no obvious inevitability. If anything, everything feels up for grabs.

Start with the Vice President. Sara Duterte continues to top presidential surveys, a fact her allies never tire of repeating. But surveys only tell part of the story. Looming over her are multiple corruption cases before the Ombudsman and the very real possibility of a second impeachment in Congress. 

These are not abstract threats. They involve hundreds of millions of pesos in confidential funds, billions allegedly sourced from criminal activities, and allegations that could still expose uncomfortable details about how power and money flowed under her watch. The real question is not just where these cases will end up, but what they will uncover along the way. 

So far, the Vice President’s strategy has been silence or deflection. That may have worked when questions were limited and proof was sparse. It is far less clear whether that approach can survive sustained investigation and damaging evidence laid out in public.

On the other side sits an embattled incumbent. President Bongbong Marcos has already been written off by some pundits as ineffectual or a lame duck, battered by corruption scandals, sinking approval numbers, and a sense that his administration has lost control of the narrative. 

And yet, writing off a sitting President more than two years before an election is always risky. The presidency remains a powerful office, with vast influence over institutions, priorities, and timing. 

The question is whether this administration still has the focus and political will to use that power to recover some of its flagging credibility, deliver on its promises of accountability, and reshape the field before 2028 arrives.  Surviving is one thing. Shaping the outcome is another.

Then there are the rainbow colors of the progressive bloc, which in theory should be thriving in this moment. Widespread anger over corruption, patronage, and elite impunity should be fertile ground for calls of “honest government” and “straight path.” 

Yet so far, progressives remain fragmented, rich in principles but poor in consolidation. There is no singular leader, no unifying voice capable of cutting through the noise, giving articulation to outrage, and rallying broad public support. The ideas are there. The energy is there. What is lacking is a face and a name that people can project their hopes onto. Whether 2026 becomes the year that leader finally rises to the fore will be crucial.

Hovering over all of this is corruption itself. Flood control scams. Confidential funds. Pre-insertions. Bagmen. These are not just scandals. They are active fault lines. As investigations grind on, some political careers will not survive what comes out. Others may emerge bruised but intact. And a few may even benefit from being seen as survivors in a system under siege.

This is why 2028 cannot be read from today’s surveys alone. Approval numbers fluctuate. Narratives shift. Sometimes with startling speed. What will matter most is how these unresolved corruption cases end, who they take down, and who manages to convincingly stand apart from the wreckage.

One thing is certain. 2026 is not a quiet prelude. It is the opening act. And it promises to be anything but boring.