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  • In the Philippines,

  • the most important election in a generation is about to take place.

  • The namesake son of dictator Ferdinand Marcos

  • is poised to be president.

  • (CHEERING)

  • Marcos Jr's rise has divided the nation

  • and become a referendum on fact vs fiction.

  • Fuelling it all is a social media machine that's rewriting history.

  • How is social media influencing this election?

  • It will determine who wins.

  • I mean, how crazy is that, right?

  • WOMAN: The young ones, they don't know that this happened,

  • and they believe that the Marcoses had a good government.

  • All of these lies against the Marcos are all propaganda.

  • (CHEERING AND APPLAUSE)

  • In Tarlac City, two hours north of Manila,

  • the streets hum with a familiar cry.

  • BBM!

  • Presidential candidate Ferdinand Marcos Jr is in town

  • and thousands of local fans have come to support him.

  • BBM, BBM!

  • (HORN HONKS)

  • Known as Bongbong, or BBM,

  • his initials are more than a catchy slogan.

  • They're part of an elaborate effort to distance the Marcos family

  • from their brutal history.

  • BBM!

  • OK! OK!

  • OK! OK.

  • WOMAN: Marcos have done some things that people would disagree,

  • but there are still a lot of positives.

  • So, for me, that's the reason why I'm still supporting Bongbong.

  • Why not give it a try, right?

  • (CHEERING AND SHOUTING)

  • Thousands of people have been turning up here since dawn

  • just to catch a glimpse of the man

  • that they hope will be the next president of the Philippines.

  • BBM! BBM!

  • The excitement here is incredible,

  • when you think this family was run out of the Philippines

  • a few decades ago.

  • But the Marcoses never went away,

  • and they've been masterful at using social media

  • to attract a new generation of supporters

  • who don't know - or remember -

  • the dark reality of the Marcos Sr dictatorship.

  • (CHEERING)

  • Marcos Jr avoids journalists,

  • preferring vloggers like Ruben Gelio,

  • who livestream, comment and post only positive messages about him.

  • Do you think you're more powerful

  • than the mainstream media following the campaign?

  • Um...

  • I think so.

  • Because some of the media is so biased about Marcos

  • and they never show anything that Bongbong Marcos...

  • ..a good...a good deed.

  • And as vloggers, we show the other side of the coin to the people.

  • So, this is the real Marcos, not the...

  • ..not the one that mainstream said.

  • (CHEERING)

  • Marcos Jr has got more than 10 million followers

  • across Facebook, YouTube, TikTok and Twitter.

  • His campaign is turbocharged by his own social media team,

  • who produce hours of videos reframing the Marcos story.

  • If there is one thing that I think

  • clearly sets my father apart,

  • it's that he had a very clear vision for our country.

  • He viewed his work as president as one of nation-building -

  • of building up our country to make it better.

  • (CHEERING)

  • Leading polls with 56% support,

  • Marcos Jr seems unstoppable.

  • BBM! BBM!

  • One of the Marcos campaign's staunchest allies

  • is this man.

  • Attorney Larry Gadon!

  • Vying for a Senate seat in these elections,

  • Larry Gadon is a fixture at Marcos rallies.

  • The suspended lawyer is notorious

  • for his crude, violent and sexist language.

  • But the Marcos Jr campaign says he's been loyal.

  • How did you feel when Ferdinand Marcos Sr was removed from power?

  • I...I was crying for a whole week.

  • I did not... I wasn't able to go out of the house.

  • I was really hurt by what happened to President Marcos.

  • So, do you feel that this is a comeback of sorts?

  • Yes. Bongbong Marcos is a comeback for the Marcoses.

  • I think, uh, people get tired of,

  • uh, the mudslinging against the Marcoses,

  • and, uh, the people now realise

  • that the best president and the best administration we had,

  • uh, was President Marcos.

  • (BOTH SING IN LOCAL LANGUAGE)

  • For two decades, Ferdinand Marcos Sr and his wife, Imelda,

  • ruled like King and Queen.

  • Although he was elected in 1965

  • and again in '69,

  • the charismatic couple were a package deal.

  • Initially, the economy grew under Marcos

  • and the President spent big on infrastructure.

  • But cracks appeared.

  • NEWS REPORTER: He has proclaimed himself President, Prime Minister,

  • chief of the armed forces,

  • and one-man government, all in one.

  • In 1972, toward the end of his final term in office,

  • Marcos Sr declared martial law.

  • NEWS REPORTER: Elections have been cancelled.

  • Criticism of his actions and his regime has been outlawed.

  • His political opponents have been jailed.

  • (SHOUTING)

  • Thousands were murdered, tortured or disappeared,

  • while Ferdinand and Imelda blew millions

  • on property, fine art and jewellery.

  • (SPEAKS LOCAL LANGUAGE)

  • By 1986, the Philippines could take no more...

  • NEWS REPORTER: The economy is in ruins.

  • The country has been bitterly divided,

  • emotionally and politically.

  • ..a popular uprising driving the Marcoses into exile,

  • where Marcos Sr later died.

  • (DOG YAPS)

  • WOMAN: So, what are the updates about the case you filed?

  • Of course, we suspect that it's going to come out

  • in favour of Marcos.

  • Tina Bawagan and Etta Rosales are sisters.

  • Both were arrested and tortured during martial law

  • and both have devoted their lives

  • to holding the Marcos dictatorship to account.

  • So, we're going to file to appeal this to the Supreme Court.

  • Because if you don't, you know, you're stupid.

  • The sisters come from a military family.

  • Tina was in primary school when Marcos Sr became president.

  • You know, we had a pretty good life.

  • My mother used to campaign for Marcos

  • because she and my father knew him personally.

  • She soon learned of his corruption.

  • Tina was 27

  • and a member of the underground resistance to the Marcos regime

  • when she was detained by soldiers.

  • I was seated in a chair, handcuffed.

  • Then they started asking questions.

  • None of my answers satisfied him.

  • So, he slapped my face.

  • Then he'd slap me again. Slap, slap, slap.

  • And then they would put a sharp object over my chest.

  • And then they would fondle my breasts.

  • And then the worst of it was that they put an object inside my vagina.

  • And I shouted, but it was like no-one could hear.

  • The physical torture only stopped

  • when soldiers got word of her family's military connections.

  • But Tina remained in detention for a month.

  • You know, there are so many other stories,

  • a lot more horrible than mine.

  • I know of some women who were raped

  • but they cannot tell it because there is...there's a stigma.

  • It's important to tell it again and again and again,

  • because so many of our countrymen don't know it anymore.

  • The young ones, they don't know that this happened

  • and they believe that the Marcoses

  • had a good...Marcos had a good government,

  • a benevolent government -

  • that we were fine then.

  • We have to continue to tell the story

  • so that it doesn't happen again.

  • At a quiet shrine in the capital,

  • those who fought against the Marcos regime are remembered.

  • Despite many eyewitness accounts and official reports about the violence,

  • Larry Gadon dismisses it all.

  • LARRY GADON: That is all propaganda.

  • No-one was killed, disappeared or tortured?

  • Those are rebels.

  • They choose to fight the government,

  • then, if they die, that's their fault.

  • Don't tell me you will fight the government

  • and you will just receive a slap on your face.

  • They were fighting a dictatorship.

  • Those are propaganda. We are all free during that time.

  • The majority of the Filipino people

  • do not believe those lies, those propaganda,

  • of human rights violations.

  • Otherwise, they would not go to BBM's rallies.

  • (THUNDER RUMBLES)

  • WOMAN: (ON RADIO) Storm signals are now up

  • as Agaton intensifies into a tropical storm.

  • Expected gale force winds in Leyte.

  • On the island of Leyte, in the central Philippines,

  • people have a special place in their hearts for the Marcoses.

  • (DRUMMING)

  • Imelda Marcos grew up here, in Tacloban,

  • where her family dominates local politics.

  • (CHEERING)

  • (CHEERING)

  • Tonight's rally is a family affair.

  • Marcos Jr's three sons are beloved on social media

  • and, this time, he's brought his youngest, Vincent, along.

  • This is how dynasties are made.

  • If Marcos Jr pulls this election victory off,

  • the family will emerge as the most powerful political clan

  • in the country.

  • (CHEERING ON RECORDING)

  • Chemmy Rivas was born in Tacloban

  • and, like so many people I spoke to,

  • her loyalty to the Marcoses goes back generations.

  • She spends about five hours on social media a day

  • and it's reinforced her views about the Marcos family.

  • The platform is awash with videos like this,

  • which claim the Marcoses weren't corrupt.

  • (KIDS SHOUT PLAYFULLY)

  • WOMAN: 100% of Filipinos on the internet are on Facebook.

  • Facebook is our internet.

  • Journalist Maria Ressa is the founder of news outlet Rappler

  • and a fighter in the global war against disinformation.

  • There were definitely Marcos networks of disinformation.

  • A lot of them were taken down, but then they've regenerated,

  • and this will help pave the way for a win.

  • The elections in the Philippines on May 9th are emblematic

  • of everything that is wrong, right?

  • How does Ferdinand Marcos Jr,

  • the son of a dictator

  • who was ousted in a people power revolt 36 years earlier...

  • ..how can history have been changed so drastically?

  • With the help of social media platforms.

  • For years, Maria Ressa and her team

  • have been mapping the spread of disinformation networks

  • in the Philippines.

  • MARIA RESSA: When we looked at this over time,

  • from 2016 all the way to 2022,

  • what we saw was that these networks began to take over

  • the centre of the information ecosystem

  • and slowly push out the traditional news groups.

  • And these news organisations that thought they had tremendous power

  • were essentially pushed to the side

  • and the centre of the information ecosystem

  • was taken over by disinformation networks.

  • And what...

  • In January, Twitter suspended more than 300 accounts and hashtags

  • promoting Marcos Jr's campaign.

  • The company found they breached its rules on spam and manipulation.

  • You cannot have integrity of elections

  • if you don't have integrity of facts.

  • And what social media has done is not only to make facts debatable,

  • but to actually spread lies faster and further than facts.

  • Ruben, tell me, what time is it in New York?

  • It's 7:25 in New York, PM.

  • Lawyer Ruben Carranza was a government investigator

  • charged with tracking down the billions of dollars stolen

  • by the Marcoses and their associates.

  • One estimate that the commission I served in continues to use

  • is somewhere between $5 billion to as much as $10 billion.

  • How did they get away with it?

  • They were able to hide the corruption they committed

  • by using political violence and repression.

  • At the same time, they were able to steal as much as they could

  • because they controlled all levers of power in the state.

  • This was also cruelty.

  • Children were dying of malnutrition.

  • The Marcoses went on shopping, stealing,

  • hoarding ill-gotten wealth.

  • The commission has recovered about US$3.3 billion

  • and another $2.4 billion is under litigation.

  • Dozens of cases have been brought against the family.

  • Imelda Marcos was convicted of graft in 2018

  • but is out on bail and appealing the verdict.

  • She's has never gone to jail -

  • a fact which feeds the lie they never stole anything at all.

  • RUBEN CARRANZA: That's also the reason why Marcos Jr is running -

  • to make sure that his mother will continue to have the impunity

  • that they've had for decades.

  • In a sea of presidential aspirants,

  • only one has any chance of stopping a Marcos Jr victory.

  • MAN: Leni Robredo!

  • Leni Robredo beat Marcos Jr for the vice-presidency in 2016,

  • then spent years fighting his official protest of the result.

  • (CHEERING)

  • Before entering politics, Robredo was a human rights lawyer.

  • She's running for the presidency on an anti-corruption platform,

  • and a promise to reduce poverty.

  • But she's not cutting through.

  • Only 23% of voters support her.

  • Her running mate is Senator Kiko Pangilinan.

  • Why do you think so many people are voting for the Marcos campaign?

  • Unfortunately, we don't think

  • the Googles and the Facebooks and the Tiktoks are doing enough.

  • We feel they should be doing more.

  • A lot of voters have no time to really digest.

  • They're too busy trying to make a living.

  • They're just too busy trying to keep their heads above the water.

  • And, so, whatever is there that's repeated over and over again,

  • they tend to absorb that.

  • For this community in the capital, Manila, daily life is a struggle.

  • One in four Filipinos live in poverty...

  • ..and disillusionment with politicians is high.

  • Jaja Fugoso has been working in this community for two years.

  • She's conducting voter education sessions ahead of polling day.

  • Phone data costs a dollar.

  • And if you run out of credit, the Facebook newsfeed is free.

  • Democracy is so vulnerable because people's minds and emotions

  • are so easy to manipulate.

  • The biggest problem that I see, globally,

  • is that news organisations lost our gate-keeping powers to tech,

  • and tech abdicated responsibility for protecting the public sphere.

  • Our requests for an interview with Marcos Jr

  • have been repeatedly stonewalled.

  • So, I decided to try putting some questions to his running mate,

  • vice-presidential candidate Sara Duterte.

  • She's the daughter of current president Rodrigo Duterte.

  • I wanted to know why these two political dynasties

  • have decided to join forces.

  • (MAN SPEAKS LOCAL LANGUAGE ON LOUDSPEAKER)

  • MAN: (ON LOUDSPEAKER) Duterte!

  • Duterte!

  • We're soon surrounded by security.

  • It's not that she doesn't want to answer questions,

  • except that these people came out for her.

  • The reason why we're asking, "What's your questions?"

  • is because we need to relay the questions to Maam Sara

  • and then, um...

  • So that you can then vet the questions

  • and decide whether to provide an interview or not?

  • That's an obfuscation tactic by your campaign

  • to avoid hard questions.

  • Oh, no, no.

  • If we wanted to frustrate you, we wouldn't even approach you now.

  • Back off, back off.

  • Back off. Back off.

  • (HORN HONKS LOUDLY)

  • (BOTH SPEAK LOCAL LANGUAGE)

  • On the other side of the city,

  • vlogger Ruben Gelio is churning out more Marcos Jr content.

  • Ruben is the vlog's sole employee.

  • His boss is Jay Cho, who runs the page from his flat.

  • JAY CHO: The mainstream media in the Philippines

  • is a bit sketchy nowadays,

  • because they didn't like Bongbong Marcos,

  • and even the father of Bongbong Marcos.

  • A lot of people in the Philippines, or even abroad,

  • are depending on the vloggers

  • because they report non-edited news,

  • such as like what we're doing.

  • Facebook pages like yours have been accused of spreading misinformation.

  • Do you think you spread misinformation?

  • No, because I only spread support for Bongbong Marcos.

  • I didn't say, "Oh, this other politician,

  • "this other presidential aspirant,

  • "is this or that, this or that."

  • I only speak for the support of the Filipinos for Bongbong Marcos.

  • I didn't indulge in negative campaigning,

  • as Bongbong Marcos said.

  • They say the Marcos campaign doesn't pay them,

  • but the ad revenue they generate from Facebook

  • is enough to support them both.

  • Do you see yourself as a Marcos fan first or a businessman first?

  • Well, I look at myself as a supporter

  • and what I'm doing is... well, if I earn for what I'm doing,

  • it's just perks of it.

  • Number one will be BBM and Sara. Just keep up the good work.

  • Filipinos love BBM.

  • (SPEAKS LOCAL LANGUAGE)

  • Do you feel that you are partly responsible for why he's so popular?

  • Well, um...

  • ..yeah, a little bit.

  • Yeah. Maybe.

  • How does that feel?

  • Well, it's my...it's called in Filipino, it's 'ambag'.

  • It's my way of, uh, giving back to the people.

  • CROWD: BBM! BBM! BBM!

  • LARRY GADON: People love him. You can see.

  • Bongbong Marcos will win.

  • BBM! BBM! BBM! BBM!

  • Did you ever think that you would see the Marcoses in power again?

  • Oh, no. Not at all.

  • Well, at least not in 1986.

  • We were so happy that they left and we thought they would never return.

  • Captions by Red Bee Media

  • Copyright Australian Broadcasting Corporation

In the Philippines,

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