Philippines’ first family says financial scrutiny welcome amid graft allegations

The Philippines’ first family has signalled its readiness to open its finances to scrutiny after allegations that President Ferdinand Marcos Jnr’s son received a disproportionate share of public works funding, deepening a political crisis that has already forced several senior officials from office.
Such financial inspections – known locally as lifestyle checks and used to detect unexplained wealth among public officials – have taken on new urgency as the government confronts the widening corruption scandal over “ghost” flood-control projects that were allegedly substandard or never built, a controversy now fuelling nationwide anger amid a year of deadly typhoons.

A report last week revealed that Ilocos Norte lawmaker Sandro Marcos, the president’s eldest son, secured about 15.8 billion Philippine pesos (US$269 million) in funding from the Department of Public Works and Highways between 2023 and 2025, making his district one of the country’s top grant recipients despite having a population of fewer than 320,000.

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Presidential Communications Officer Claire Castro said the president was aware of the disclosure and welcomed a lifestyle check on his family to clear the air regarding the corruption accusations.

Philippine church group protests against flood-control corruption scandal

Philippine church group protests against flood-control corruption scandal

“That option has always been there. No one is excluded from undergoing a lifestyle check,” Castro said on Tuesday.

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She added that the first family had been “open” to such an audit even before the multibillion-peso flood-control corruption scandal erupted earlier this year, sparking nationwide anti-corruption protests demanding accountability.